Grace Paley Popular Books

Grace Paley Biography & Facts

Grace Paley, née Goodside (December 11, 1922 – August 22, 2007) was an American short story author, poet, teacher, and political activist. Paley wrote three critically acclaimed collections of short stories, which were compiled in the Pulitzer Prize and National Book Award finalist The Collected Stories in 1994. Her stories home in on the everyday conflicts and heartbreaks of city life, heavily informed by her childhood in the Bronx. Beyond her work as an author and university professor, Paley was a feminist and anti-war activist, describing herself as a "somewhat combative pacifist and cooperative anarchist." Early life and education Grace Paley was born Grace Goodside on December 11, 1922, in the Bronx, to Jewish parents, Isaac Goodside and the former Manya Ridnyik, who were originally from Ukraine, and were socialists—especially her mother. They had immigrated 16–17 years before (in 1906, by one account)—following a period, under the rule of the Ukraine by Czar Nicholas II, that saw their exile, her mother to Germany and her father to Siberia—with the change of name from Gutseit as they began their new life in New York. The family spoke Russian and Yiddish in the home, and eventually English (which her father learned "by reading Dickens"). Isaac trained and became a doctor in New York, and the couple had two children early, and a third, Grace, as they approached middle age. Fourteen years younger than her sister, Jeanne, and sixteen years younger than her brother, Victor, Grace was described as being a tomboy as a child. As a child she was tuned in to the intellectual debates of the adults around her, and she was a member of the Falcons, a socialist youth group. After dropping out of high school at sixteen, Grace Goodside attended Hunter College for a year (spanning 1938-1939), then married a film cameraman, Jess Paley, when she was 19, on June 20, 1942. The Paleys had two children, Nora (born 1949) and Danny (born 1951), but later divorced. Writing to introduce an interview in The Paris Review, Jonathan Dee, Barbara Jones, and Larissa MacFarquhar note thatWriting has only occasionally been Paley’s main occupation. She spent a lot of time in playgrounds when her children were young. She has always been very active in the feminist and peace movements... Paley studied briefly with W. H. Auden, at the New School, when she was seventeen, pursuing a hope to be a poet. She did not receive a degree from either institution. Writing Early in her writing career, Paley experienced a number of rejections for her submitted works. She published her first collection, The Little Disturbances of Man (1959) with Doubleday. The collection features eleven stories of New York life, several of which have since been widely anthologized, particularly "Goodbye and Good Luck" and "The Used-Boy Raisers," and introduces the semi-autobiographical character "Faith Darwin" (in "The Used-Boy Raisers" and "A Subject of Childhood")—who later appears in six stories of Enormous Changes at the Last Minute and nine of Later the Same Day. Though as a story collection by an unknown author the book was not widely reviewed, those who did review it, including Philip Roth and The New Yorker book page, tended to rate the stories highly. Despite an initial lack of publicity, Little Disturbances developed a sufficient following for it to be reissued by Viking Press in 1968. Following the success of Little Disturbances, Paley's publisher encouraged her to write a novel, but she gave up on the attempt after tinkering with drafts for two years. She instead continued to focus on short stories. With the encouragement of her friend and neighbor Donald Barthelme, Paley assembled a second collection of fiction in 1974, Enormous Changes at the Last Minute, which was published by Farrar, Straus & Giroux. This collection of seventeen stories features several recurring characters from Little Disturbances (most notably the narrator "Faith," but also including John Raftery and his mother), while continuing Paley's exploration of racial, gender, and class issues. The long story "Faith in a Tree," positioned roughly at the center of the collection, brings a number of characters and themes from the stories together on a Saturday afternoon at the park; in it, Faith, the narrator, climbs a tree to get a broader perspective on both her neighbors and the "man-wide world" and, after encountering several war protesters, declares a new social and political commitment. The collection's shifting narrative voice, metafictive qualities and fragmented, incomplete plots have led some critics to classify it as a postmodernist work. In Later the Same Day (1985), also published by Farrar, Straus & Giroux, Paley continues the stories of Faith and her neighbors—but somewhat expanded, with the addition of more black and lesbian voices. Paley's stories were regathered in a volume from Farrar, Straus in 1994, The Collected Stories, which was a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize and the National Book Award. Her work has been characterized as dealing with the day-to-day triumphs and tragedies of "women — mostly Jewish, mostly New Yorkers." As one editor who worked with Paley wrote, "Her characters are people who smell of onions, yell at each other, mourn in darkened kitchens." She wrote what she knew: "I couldn’t help the fact that I had not gone to war, and I had not done the male things. I had lived a woman’s life and that’s what I wrote about."Her sharp dialogue is marked by the rhythms of Yiddish, and her stories tend to reflect the "shouts and murmurs of secular Yiddishkeit." Although more widely known for her short fiction, Paley also published several volumes of poetry including Leaning Forward (1985) and New and Collected Poems (1992). In 1991 she published Long Walks and Intimate Talks, which combined poems and prose writing, and in 2001 she released the collection Begin Again: Collected Poems, which assembled work from throughout her life. Paley published an essay collection, Just As I Thought, in 1999. She also contributed the piece "Why Peace Is (More Than Ever) a Feminist Issue" to the 2003 anthology Sisterhood Is Forever: The Women's Anthology for a New Millennium, edited by Robin Morgan. Her final book, the poetry collection Fidelity, was published posthumously in 2008. Academic career Paley began to teach writing at Sarah Lawrence College in 1966 (through to 1989) and helped to found the Teachers & Writers Collaborative in New York in the late 1960s. She subsequently served on the faculty at City College and taught courses at Columbia University. She also taught at Syracuse University and served as vice president of the PEN American Center, an organization she'd worked to diversify in the 1980s. Paley summarized her view of teaching during a symposium on "Educating the Imagination," sponsored by the Teachers & Writers Collaborative in 1996:"Our idea was that children—by writing, by putting down words, by reading, by.... Discover the Grace Paley popular books. Find the top 100 most popular Grace Paley books.

Best Seller Grace Paley Books of 2024

  • Fifty Fashion Looks that Changed the 1950s synopsis, comments

    Fifty Fashion Looks that Changed the 1950s

    DESIGN MUSEUM ENTERPRISE LTD & Paula Reed

    The Design Museum and fashion guru Paula Reed present Fifty Fashion Looks that Changed the 1950s. The most exciting, influential and definitive looks of one of the most significant...

  • Freak Weather synopsis, comments

    Freak Weather

    Mary Kuryla

    From a nurse who sees a rattlesnake in the pediatric ICU to an animal control officer convinced she's found her abducted daughter in the house of a dog hoarder, the thirteen storie...

  • The End of the Novel of Love synopsis, comments

    The End of the Novel of Love

    Vivian Gornick

    A finalist for the National Book Critics Circle Award for Criticism, Vivian Gornick's The End of the Novel of Love explores the meaning of love and marriage as literary themes in t...

  • I Feel a Little Jumpy Around You synopsis, comments

    I Feel a Little Jumpy Around You

    Naomi Shihab Nye

    An awardwinning anthology of paired poems by men and women.In this insightful anthology, the editors grouped almost 200 poems into pairs to demonstrate the different ways in which ...

  • Wild Horse synopsis, comments

    Wild Horse

    Eric Neuenfeldt

    Winner of the prestigious Grace Paley Prize, Wild Horse explores human experience in forgotten places of America’s industrial decline. Interweaving images of remarkable natural bea...

  • Grace Paley synopsis, comments

    Grace Paley

    Jacqueline Taylor

    Grace Paley is a “writer’s writer,” admired by both scholars and the reading public for her originality and unique voice. In this first booklength study of her work, Jacqueline Tay...

  • The FSG Poetry Anthology synopsis, comments

    The FSG Poetry Anthology

    Jonathan Galassi & Robyn Creswell

    To honor FSG's 75th anniversary, here is a unique anthology celebrating the riches and variety of its poetry listpast, present, and futurePoetry has been at the heart of Farrar, St...

  • A Curious Land synopsis, comments

    A Curious Land

    Susan Muaddi Darraj

    Winner of the 2016 American Book Award, the 2016 Arab American Book Award, and the 2014 Grace Paley Prize in Short FictionSusan Muaddi Darraj’s short story collection about the inh...

  • The Modern Library synopsis, comments

    The Modern Library

    Carmen Callil & Colm Tóibín

    For Colm Toíbín and Carmen Callil there is no difference between literary and commercial writing there is only the good novel: engrossing, inspirational, compelling. In their sele...

  • The Promise of a Normal Life synopsis, comments

    The Promise of a Normal Life

    Rebecca Kaiser Gibson

    For readers of Marilynne Robinson, Elizabeth Strout, and Katie Kitamura, the indelible journey of a quiet young womanthe “silent person” in the Sederfinding her way.   Hailed ...

  • Just As I Thought synopsis, comments

    Just As I Thought

    Grace Paley

    This rich and multifaceted collection is Grace Paley's vivid record of her life. As close to an autobiography as anything we are likely to have from this quintessentially American ...

  • The Paris Review Book synopsis, comments

    The Paris Review Book

    The Paris Review

    An exciting new anthology from the journal Time magazine called "the biggest 'little magazine' in history." To commemorate the fiftieth anniversary of the venerable Paris Review, ...

  • My Escapee synopsis, comments

    My Escapee

    Corinna Vallianatos

    Delicate and assured, the stories in My Escapee illuminate unseen forces in women’s lives: the shameful thought, the stifled hope, the subterranean stresses of marriage, friendship...

  • A Grace Paley Reader synopsis, comments

    A Grace Paley Reader

    Grace Paley, Kevin Bowen & Nora Paley

    One of The New Yorker's "Books We Loved in 2017"A Grace Paley Reader compiles a selection of Paley’s writing across genres, showcasing her breadth of work as well as her extraordin...

  • The Collected Stories synopsis, comments

    The Collected Stories

    Grace Paley

    This reissue of Grace Paley's classic collectiona finalist for the National Book Awarddemonstrates her rich use of language as well as her extraordinary insight into and compassion...

  • Veterans Crisis Hotline synopsis, comments

    Veterans Crisis Hotline

    Jon Chopan

    The twelve stories of Veterans Crisis Hotline offer a meditation on the relationship between war and righteousness and consider the impossible distance between who men are and who ...

  • The Collected Stories of Amy Hempel synopsis, comments

    The Collected Stories of Amy Hempel

    Amy Hempel

    The Collected Stories of Amy Hempel gathers together the complete work of a writer whose voice is as singular and astonishing as any in American fiction. Hempel, fiercely admired b...