Fathers
Under Review
Should We Expect More from Dads?
Two new books assess our contemporary scripts for fatherhood.
By Hua Hsu
Personal History
Missing My Dad’s Funeral
At thirteen, I went to sleepaway camp, consumed by crushes, the Red Hot Chili Peppers, and my father’s worsening battle with AIDS.
By Emily Ziff Griffin
Culture Desk
Time-Travelling with My Father
Accompanying my dad to dialysis doesn’t feel like the promise of the future I had imagined.
By Navied Mahdavian
The Weekend Essay
Growing Up in the House of Freud
My psychoanalyst father wanted to prove the existence of the unconscious in the lab—and at home.
By Gillian Silverman
Culture Desk
The Things We Carry
Sometimes, now as parents, we say things and only a while later realize that it was an echo of our parents, from decades before.
By Tienlon Ho and Jon Adams
The New Yorker Documentary
A Different Kind of Coming-Out Story in “Dad Can Dance”
When Jamie Ross learned about their father’s unexpected history—in ballet and romance—it opened the door to discovery and reconciliation.
The New Yorker Documentary
Animating Archives with Emotion in “Love, Dad”
In a short documentary about a troubled family relationship, Diana Cam Van Nguyen uses cuts, folds, and mixed media to bring old letters to life.
Culture Desk
On Outscoring My Father
What would he make of my middle-age obsession with basketball?
By Thomas Beller
Personal History
What Happened When My Wife Died
More than anything, Diana had wanted to be a mother. Now my three-year-old daughter and I had to find a way to live without her.
By Charles Bock
Shouts & Murmurs
Walk to Day Care, No. 378
“Avery, did you know snails move super slow?”
By Hartley Lin
Personal History
A Recipe for Forgiveness
My father was troubled, moody, and struggling with alcoholism. Making dinner for our family was what brought him back to us.
By Helen Longstreth
Personal History
The Truth About My Father
My mother was a white woman. Until I was sixteen, I believed that, on my father’s side, I was descended from the enslaved people who had crossed the Atlantic in chains.
By David Wright Faladé
Double Take
Sunday Reading: Fathers and Fatherhood
From the archive: a collection of memorable pieces about fathers and our relationships with them.
By The New Yorker
The New Yorker Documentary
The Blind Man Running His Family Diner
In Stephen Michael Simon’s “Bacon ’n’ Laces,” John Diakakis shows off his memory and sense of humor while managing the Bendix Diner, with the help of his oldest son.
Letter from Texas
A Texas Teen-Ager’s Abortion Odyssey
The Heartbeat Act is forcing families to journey to oversubscribed clinics in other states—offering a preview of life in post-Roe America.
By Stephania Taladrid
Personal History
With Father-and-Son Writers, Who Gets to Tell the Family Story?
A relationship reconsidered by reading between the lines.
By Tad Friend
Screening Room
A Stop-Motion Tour of Memory in “Souvenir”
Paloma Canonica and Cristina Vilches created a vast visual world to show a father and daughter’s shared history.
Personal History
Ghosts at the Liquor Store
None of us thought my dad was the enemy. Perhaps booze was. At the time, thick as we were with shame, the enemy looked like other people.
By Samantha Hunt
Culture Desk
The Day I Declared Myself a Cartoonist
I was well aware that, until I told my father that I had dropped out of school, I would have only one foot in my new life.
By David Sipress
Personal History
A Passage to Parenthood
One of the reasons I began thinking about I.V.F. was that I was overflowing with love for my wife and wanted a place to put that love.
By Akhil Sharma