Dec 17, 2009
A Conversation with My Father | A Conversation with My Father
At a glance:
- Author: Grace Paley
- First Published: 1971
- Type of Plot: Metafiction
- Time of Work: About 1971
- Setting: New York City
- Principal Characters: The daughter, Her father, A mother, A son, A young woman
- Genres: Short fiction, Metafiction
- Subjects: New York, North America or North Americans, Northeast, U.S., United States or Americans, Authors or writers, New York City, Death or dying, Creative process, Sick persons, Tragedy, Speeches, Generation gap, Old age or elderly people
- Locales: New York, NY
The Story
One evening, the narrator's eighty-six-year-old father lies in bed in his New York
home. Unable to walk, he suffers from a heart condition after having lived a rich life as a doctor
and an artist. He appears near death, for he has pills at hand and breathes oxygen from a bedside
tank. He has not lost his intelligence, interest in art, or concern for his daughter, however. In what
might be the speech of one knowing that he is near death, he confronts his daughter about the
kind of short stories that she writes. He wishes that she would write “simple”
stories like...
[The entire page is 1435 words long]
Join eNotes
The above is a free excerpt. Get total access to this content with the:
eNotes Pass
©2000-2009
Enotes.com Inc.
All Rights Reserved