If you’ve ever experienced a family fracturing, this story will land like a stone in your chest. If you haven’t, it will give you the closest thing to the real feeling—without the legal bills.
Absolutely. It’s short (only about 15 pages), available online and in The Early Stories: 1953-1975 , and it will change how you think about the quiet catastrophes happening behind the closed doors of your own neighborhood. separating by john updike
Bring tissues. And maybe don’t read it right before bed. If you’ve ever experienced a family fracturing, this
He was not past it. And neither are we. “Separating” isn’t just a story about divorce. It’s about the limits of language, the failure of adult rationality, and the way love and damage can coexist in the same house. Updike refuses to judge Richard or Joan. Instead, he asks us to sit with the uncomfortable truth that sometimes, doing the “right” thing (ending a dead marriage) still feels like a terrible wrong to the people you love most. It’s short (only about 15 pages), available online
John Updike, the Pulitzer Prize-winning chronicler of American middle-class life, had a unique gift for finding profound drama in quiet, domestic moments. Perhaps no story exemplifies this better than “Separating,” a sharp, heartbreaking, and darkly comic tale from his 1975 collection, Problems and Other Stories .