Goodbye, My Brother
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| "Goodbye, My Brother" | |
|---|---|
| Short story by John Cheever | |
| Country | United States |
| Language | English |
| Publication | |
| Published in | The New Yorker |
| Publication date | August 25, 1951 |
"Goodbye, My Brother" is a short story by John Cheever, first published in The New Yorker (August 25, 1951), and collected in The Enormous Radio and Other Stories (1953).[1] The work also appears in The Stories of John Cheever (1978).
"Goodbye, My Brother" records the apparently final reunion of the upper-middle-class Pommeroy family at their collectively owned Massachusetts seaside property.
Three brothers, a sister, and their widowed mother are gathered at the summer residence, and though they meet infrequently they retain affectionate bonds with each other. The third and youngest of the brothers, Lawrence, is an acerbic lawyer who has little in common with his siblings and who harshly judges the moral shortcomings of each member of the family.
The story emerges as a struggle between the puritanical outlook held by Lawrence and the more tolerant and life-affirming values of his mother and siblings.[2][3]
Publication history
Originally published by The New Yorker on August 25, 1951, Cheever was emphatic that "Goodbye, My Brother" appear as the leading story in the 1978 collection of his work The Stories of John Cheever, though he acknowledged it violated the chronological framework of the volume.[4][5]
Critical assessment
Widely regarded as one of Cheever's short fiction "masterpieces" the story is among his most anthologized work.[6][7][8]
Literary critic Lynne Waldeland observes that "Cheever is seldom listed among the major innovators in fiction in the twentieth century and seems at first glance to be quite traditional in form," but adds that "Goodbye, My Brother" represents a significant advance in the development of Cheever's writing, in which "genre-expanding experimentation takes place."[9]