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Fatherhood, Fathers - Biography, U.S. Poets - Literary Biography
Furthering My Education by William Corbett β€” book cover

Furthering My Education

by William Corbett
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Overview

On a Thursday morning in 1965, Dr. William Corbett tacked a note to his office door: "I have gone to further my education." Neither his patients nor his family ever saw him again. Cut off from all contact with his father, his son is forced to piece together a composite sketch of his absent parent's life. Over the years he traces his father's peripatetic movement across the globe; what he cannot do is locate him in any geography of the heart. For over thirty years, themes of transience and loss have occupied poet and essayist William Corbett. Nowhere in his work do they find fuller, more direct expression than they do here. In Furthering My Education, William Corbett has written a compelling memoir of his painful relationship with his father, a man who sought to control his family and his fate through fortune hunting, artifice and intimidation. This powerful memoir of an American family goes to the heart of parent-child relationships and the bankruptcy of trust.

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Editorials

Publishers Weekly - Publisher's Weekly

In 1965, a Connecticut doctor, after 25 years of practice, posted a note on his office door reading, "I have gone to further my education," and dropped out of sight. A rumor-which turned out to be true-said he ran off to Baghdad with a woman named Gloria. He left behind a wife, substantial financial debt and two sons-one of whom wrote this surprisingly dispassionate memoir. Corbett, a poet, memoirist (Phil Guston's Late Work) and the poetry editor for Grand Street, writes not only of what this loss of a father meant to his family in years to come but also of the dysfunctionality of the family's life before the disappearance. Corbett made a career of being "bad" in prep school and college, although he had the good luck to encounter a teacher who steered him into a love of books. His brother turned to drugs. Their father, rumored to have mob connections, had dabbled in get-rich-quick schemes and owned a construction company that built gimcrack tract houses on speculation. Their mother, perhaps for good reason, chose not to see life realistically. After both their parents died, the boys learned that their father's last days were spent cooking in a Vietnamese restaurant he owned in San Diego, married to a Vietnamese woman, and owning real estate worth about $5 million. Corbett's strengths as a writer are his embrace of simplicity and his use of understatement; combined with psychological acuity, they result in a cleanly told, penetrative work. His conclusion: no matter what F. Scott Fitzgerald said, there are indeed second acts in American lives. (Apr.)

Library Journal

Corbett, the poetry editor of Grand Street and a poet and author himself (e.g., Don't Think: Look, LJ 9/1/91), here traces his attempt as a son to understand the father who deserted his family, leaving them nearly penniless, while he and his woman friend ran away to begin a new life in Iraqa strange departure that has dominated Corbett's life and writing for the past 30 years. A respected physician, Corbett's father lived a bizarre life, filled with financial ups and downs brought about by numerous ill-fated schemes. Corbett tells his family's story with a sensitivity and poignancy that underscores the long-lasting impact of parental behavior. He seems driven toward understanding, yet despite his efforts, his father's character and motivation elude him. His book will appeal to literary readers and those struggling with father-son issues.Nancy R. Ives, SUNY at Geneseo

Booknews

A memoir by poet William Corbett recounts the story of his relationship with his father whose sudden and peculiar abandonment of his family in 1965 left numerous unanswered questions. Annotation c. by Book News, Inc., Portland, Or.

Book Details

Published
April 1, 1997
Publisher
Cambridge, Mass. : Zoland Books, 1997.
Pages
208
Format
Hardcover
ISBN
9780944072745

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