Ace in the Hole by John Updike
"Ace in the Hole" by John Updike is a short story that delves into the life of Ace Anderson, a former high school basketball star grappling with feelings of inadequacy and the pressures of adulthood. As the narrative begins, Ace is driving home after losing his job, filled with apprehension about confronting his wife, Evey. He finds solace in nostalgic music while engaging in a brief confrontation with a teenager on the road, showcasing his lingering desire for past glory. Upon visiting his mother, Ace receives mixed advice—she reassures him about his job loss while hinting at cultural tensions surrounding his marriage to a Catholic woman.
As Ace returns home, he struggles with memories of his athletic past, stirred by a newspaper article referencing a young basketball player nearing his former scoring record. The story captures the tension between Ace and Evey, whose sarcastic demeanor reflects her frustration with his lack of direction. Despite the impending conflict, Ace attempts to charm Evey, momentarily rekindling their connection through dance and fantasies of past accolades. The narrative encapsulates themes of nostalgia, marital discord, and the complexities of personal identity in the face of societal expectations.
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Ace in the Hole by John Updike
First published: 1955
Type of plot: Psychological
Time of work: The 1950's
Locale: Olinger, Pennsylvania
Principal Characters:
Fred "Ace" Anderson , a twenty-six-year-old who prefers to relive his high school days rather than to face the presentMom , his mother, who defends her son against EveyEvey , his wife, who is upset about Ace losing another jobBonnie , their baby daughter
The Story
Ace Anderson is a former star high school basketball player. As the story opens, he is driving home after being fired. Fearing the wrath of Evey, his wife, he finds some consolation in listening to "Blueberry Hill" on the car radio, while he sucks powerfully on a cigarette. Reverting to adolescence, Ace challenges the teenager in the fat car in the next lane, emerging triumphant when his opponent's vehicle stalls. He then decides to stop at his mother's house to pick up Bonnie, the baby. His mother offers him the consolation that he was probably seeking by welcoming his dismissal from a job that had no future. She also states that he and Bonnie are welcome in her house if Evey is too angry. Evey, she suggests, is a wonderful girl, but she is a Catholic and should have married one of her own kind.
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When Ace declines his mother's offer, she changes the subject by informing him that his name is in the newspaper. Ace, remembering a former coach's advice about avoiding cars when you can make it on foot, sets out for home at a gallop, with Bonnie in his arms. At home, he indulges in the ritual of combing his hair in an attempt to get the look of Alan Ladd, the popular film star. Worried about Evey's impending arrival, he turns on the television, opens a beer, and finds the newspaper article, which states that a current basketball player has come within eighteen points of the county scoring record set by Olinger High's Fred Anderson in the 1949-1950 season. Ace is angered at being referred to as Fred, however, and the article only increases the tightness in his stomach, which is similar to the pregame jitters of high school days.
When Evey arrives, Ace feigns nonchalance, but she has already heard about the loss of the job from his mother. Ace sees that Evey is in a sarcastic mood ("thinking she was Lauren Bacall," he observes to himself—again, the unreal world of films, television, and popular music provides his frame of reference), and an argument is inevitable. She states that she is fed up with his stunts. She is ready to let him run right out of her life. He ought to be making his plans for the future immediately.
Ace attempts to divert Evey's anger by turning on the charm and turning up the volume of the radio, which is playing romantic music. The mood of the moment seduces Evey into her husband's arms. As they dance, Ace seems to return to greatness. He imagines his high school friends forming a circle around them; in this fantasy world, he is once more the center of attention.
Bibliography
Bloom, Harold, ed. John Updike: Modern Critical Views. New York: Chelsea House, 1987.
Boswell, Marshall. John Updike's Rabbit Tetralogy: Mastered Irony in Motion. Columbia: University of Missouri Press, 2000.
Greiner, Donald. John Updike's Novels. Athens: Ohio University Press, 1984.
Luscher, Robert M. John Updike: A Study of the Short Fiction. New York: Twayne, 1993.
Miller, D. Quentin. John Updike and the Cold War: Drawing the Iron Curtain. Columbia: University of Missouri Press, 2001.
Newman, Judie. John Updike. New York: St. Martin's Press, 1988.
Schiff, James A. John Updike Revisited. New York: Twayne, 1998.
Updike, John. Self-Consciousness: Memoirs. New York: Knopf, 1989.
Uphaus, Suzanne Henning. John Updike. New York: Frederick Ungar, 1980.