July 31, 2012
Fathers and Mothers in Transition
Family is our focus on this edition of SELECTED SHORTS. Our first story, Peter Taylor’s “Porte Cochere,” is about an angry father, his children and his house. Our second, Alice McDermott’s “Enough,” portrays a mother seeking to get the most out of life.
Peter Taylor’s “Porte Cochere,” was first published in The New Yorker in 1949, and this tale of an obdurate Tennessee father and his children still packs an emotional wallop. As reader Leonard Nimoy commented, “this is a strong one.” A porte cochere is a structure built onto the entrance of a building where vehicles stop and pass through. In this tale of an aging patriarch going anything but gentle into that good night, SHORTS literary commentator Hannah Tinti likens the image to Emily Dickinson’s famous poem “Death”:
Because I could not stop for Death,
He kindly stopped for me;
The carriage held but just ourselves
And Immortality.
Leonard Nimoy’s moving reading brings to difficult life the emotional bafflement of a man abused in childhood who resents the very security he has created for his children.
In contrast, Alice McDermott’s luscious “Enough,” is all about embracing the pleasures of life. Tinti comments: “I love this story. Especially coming from a Catholic background, the idea McDermott begins with—about a ‘good soaking’ of dishes and also the soul—to make them clean and Godly, is something I’m very familiar with.” But McDermott turns this concept in a new direction, telling us that to live a good life, a full life, you also need to soak in life’s pleasures—love, sex—and especially (in this tale) ice cream! Giving “Enough” its full due is Fionnula Flanagan.
(This program first aired during our 2010 season.) LISTEN TO THE SHOW
Facebook Comments
Leave a Reply
Get Shorts
Upcoming Events
Selected Shorts on Tour: New Milford Public Library, NJ
Thursday, June 27 at 7:30 pm
The Stories of John Updike
Wednesday, October 16 at 7:30 pm
A Surprising Night of Shorts!
Wednesday, November 6 at 7:30 pm







