Patrimony: A True Story Explained

Patrimony
Author:Philip Roth
Language:English
Subject:death and dying, father/son relationships
Genre:memoir
Publisher:Simon & Schuster
Pub Date:1991
Media Type:Print (Hardcover)
Pages:238
Isbn:0-671-70375-7
Dewey:813/.54 B 20
Congress:PS3568.O855 Z468 1991
Oclc:21448290

Patrimony: A True Story is a memoir by American writer Philip Roth. It was first published by Simon & Schuster in 1991.

Summary

Roth's memoir recounts the life, decline, and death of his father, Herman Roth, from an inoperable (and originally "benign")[1] brain tumor.

Composition

"In keeping with the unseemliness of my profession," as Roth puts it in a late chapter, the author wrote his memoir during his father's medical trials. The tone, he later explained, was not meant to be one of anger. "It was more anxiety and bewilderment. This was all new to me, all new to him, and I felt powerless to find a way to help him. We went through this experience together."[2]

Awards

Patrimony received the 1992 National Book Critics Circle Award for autobiography.[3] It was his second Book Critics Circle Award, after a 1987 fiction prize for The Counterlife.

Reception

The book was enthusiastically received. Entertainment Weeklys critic L.S. Klepp gave the memoir an "A": "Blunt and devout, comfortless and bracing, Patrimony is a triumph of unflinching memory."[4] Robert M. Adams, in The New York Review of Books called Roth's work "a major achievement."[5] R.Z. Sheppard, in Time, viewed the book's concerns as ethnic: "There is a great distance between Portnoy's Complaint, with its stage-Jewish parents, and Patrimony, the perfect eulogy for a stiff-necked elder of the tribe. Yet in celebrating his father, and by implication the source of his own character, Roth has not strayed from the long path he has cut for himself: to dramatize the adventure of assimilation in all its anxiety, humor and fertile illusions. As a writer and a son, he has now dotted the i's and crossed the t's."[6] In The New York Times Book Review, critic and future U.S. Poet Laureate Robert Pinsky wrote, "In a cunningly straightforward way, Patrimony tells one of the central true stories many Americans share nowadays: the agonized, sometimes comic labor of a family and a dying parent who must deal with all the loyalties and grudges of their past while coping with their transformed future as dictated by the invasive, also benign pressures of modern medicine and its technologies, bureaucratically organized. The struggle that Mr. Roth portrays in often ebullient detail could be summarized abstractly as the effort to keep death as it once was — a phenomenon of one particular human body and soul...It is a spirit that corresponds to the gloriously pragmatic, unpredictable genius of Philip Roth's narrative gifts."[7]

Cover

The cover photograph shows two generations of Roths: the author's father, older brother Sandy, and the writer himself, as a boy.[8]

Library of America

This memoir is included in the fifth volume of Philip Roth's collected works Novels and Other Narratives 1986–1991, published by the Library of America.

External links

Notes and References

  1. Robert Pinsky, "Letting Go," The New York Times Book Review, January 6, 1991.
  2. Barth Healy, "All New to Me, All New to HIm," The New York Times Book Review, January 6, 1991.
  3. The New York Times, "Book Critics Circle Awards," February 18, 1992. ("Philip Roth, who won a National Book Critics Circle Award in 1987 for his novel 'The Counterlife,' has been cited again, this time for a work of nonfiction.")
  4. L.S. Klepp, "Patrimony," Entertainment Weekly, January 18, 1991.
  5. Robert M. Adams, "The Reality Game," The New York Review of Books, May 16, 1991.
  6. R.Z. Sheppard, "The Source," Time, January 21, 1991.
  7. Robert Pinsky, "Letting Go," The New York Times Book Review, January 6, 1991. (The review's title is a play on words: Roth's first novel was also titled, Letting Go.)
  8. Philip Roth, Patrimony, New York: Simon & Schuster, 1991.