Another volume from a well-curated series of Everyman's Library Pocket Classics. Only one outright clunker - Harold Brodkey's "His Son, in his Arms, in Light, Aloft". The second Brodkey story I've run across lately that I thought was overstuffed, pompous, self-important - which is ironic, since I could be describing myself! Otherwise, a nice mix of classic (Joyce, Nabokov, Wharton, Carver) and modern (Packer, Shepard, Maxwell) short stories tangentially related to fatherhood. I was mentally expecting a "Chicken Soup" style collection about how great dads are. I was wrong! (Kafka's "The Judgement" is included - hardly a cuddly papa). My favorites are Andre Dubus' "A Father's Story", Ann Packer's "Her Firstborn", Jim Shepard's "The Mortality of Parents" and a beautiful posthumous Updike story called "My Father's Tears". As a father and a son, this was a nice opportunity to think about my own role and relationships as such. If that isn't the point of fiction, I don't know what is.