Patrimony: A True Story is a memoir by American writer Philip Roth. It was first published by Simon & Schuster in 1991. Roth's memoir recounts the life, decline, and death of his father, Herman Roth, from an inoperable brain tumor. "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." Patrimony received the 1992 National Book Critics Circle Award for autobiography. It was his second Book Critics Circle Award, after a 1987 fiction prize for The Counterlife. The book was enthusiastically received. Entertainment Weekly's critic L.S. Klepp gave the memoir an "A": " Blunt and devout, comfortless and bracing, Patrimony is a triumph of unflinching memory." Robert M. Adams, in The New York Review of Books called Roth's work "a major achievement." R.Z.
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| Author: | Philip Roth |
| Genre: | Non-fiction, Memoir |
| Year published: | 1991 |
| Number of editions: | 2 |