1.
What Is the Author's Father Like?
It was an impressive place: old, solidly built, in the Tudor style, with leaded windows, a slate roof, and
rooms of royal proportions. Buying it had been a big step for my parents, a sign of growing wealth. This was
the best neighborhood in town, and although it was not a pleasant place to live (especially for children), its
prestige outweighed its deadliness. Given the fact that he wound up spending the rest of his life in that
house, it is ironic that my father at first resisted moving there. He complained about the price (a constant
theme), and when at last he relented, it was with grudging bad humor. Even so, he paid in cash. All in one
go. No mortgage, no monthly payments. It was 1959, and business was going well for him.
Always a man of habit, he would leave for work early in the morning, work hard all day, and then, when he
came home (on those days he did not work late), take a short nap before dinner. Sometime during our first
week in the new house, before we had properly moved in, he made a curious kind of mistake. Instead of
driving home to the new house after work, he went directly to the old one, as he had done for years, parked
his car in the driveway, walked into the house through the back door, climbed the stairs, entered the
bedroom, lay down on the bed, and went to sleep. He slept for about an hour.
Needless to say, when the new mistress of the house returned to find a strange man sleeping in her bed,
she was a little surprised. But unlike Goldilocks, my father did not jump up and run away. The confusion
was eventually settled, and everyone had a good laugh. Even today, it still makes me laugh. And yet, for all
that, I cannot help regarding it as a pathetic story. It is one thing for a man to drive to his old house by
mistake, but it is quite another, I think, for him not to notice that anything has changed inside it.
--Paul Auster, from The Invention of Solitude (1982)
Why does the author think the story of his father's mistake is pathetic?