The Cartoonist and the Nursing Home: Roz Chast Talks to JWA About Her New Graphic Memoir

Cartoonist and author Roz Chast.

Photographed by Bill Franzen

Roz Chast is one of The New Yorker’s most enduringly popular cartoonists, beloved for her signature neurotic style and quick wit. In her first graphic memoir, Can’t We Talk About Something More Pleasant?, Chast dives into the always frustrating, often funny, sometimes surreal world of elder care. As an only child, Chast was wholly responsible for making sure her aging parents were safe and taken care of, despite their tendency to drive her completely nuts. We meet her mother Elizabeth, a domineering woman who always had the last word, and her father George, an anxious man who adored Elizabeth. Together, the three of them navigate the last years of her parents’ lives, the brutal realities of aging, and the bittersweet comedy of reaching the end of the road.  

Chast talked to JWA about the book, her parents, and her new aversion to second-hand shops.

Caring for aging parents in their final years is a fairly universal experience, but there are very few books on the subject. How did you decide to write Can’t We Talk About Something More Pleasant?

It was a way of remembering the experience of caring for them, and also a way of remembering them.

As a reader, I got the impression that caring for your parents at this stage in their lives was a bit like driving blind. What was most surprising to you about the process?

I knew very, very little about that stage of life, so in a way, the whole thing was surprising. One of my grandfathers died before I was born. Two other grandparents died when I was around three or four. The last grandparent died when I was in college.  I was surprised by how much the body can endure and still survive, and also by the amount of paperwork.

Throughout the book, you are very honest about your fraught relationship with your parents—especially your mother. Did your feelings of resentment for them intensify when you had to assume the role of caregiver?

I wish I could say otherwise, that taking care of them brought out the best in me. But it didn’t always. And, as I said in the book, they didn’t like being taken care of either.

Your parents saved everything, leaving a house full of possessions when they moved to an assisted living facility. My favorite passage in the book is when you were going through their things, picking out what to save for yourself. But I’m curious, what happened to everything else that was left in the apartment?

I paid the super to clean it out. I told him he was free to take anything he found, or give it away, or throw it out the window.

You refer to yourself as “your father’s daughter.” Do you see any of your mother in yourself?

From her I have inherited a complete lack of fashion sense. I deeply wish this were not so. I can take a Hermes scarf and make it look like a two-dollar babushka from Sears. Not to brag.

Did you have female role models growing up, outside of your mother?

Not really. I was kind of an isolated person.

As a reader, I felt that you were under a great deal of pressure to be a “perfect daughter” throughout this ordeal. Did you feel affected by that pressure, and if so, did it come from within? 

The pressure to be a better caretaker/daughter came from within and without.

How was Jewishness expressed in your home? Did your parents raise you with any particular traditions?

We went to temple on the High Holy Days, but not every year. We were not kosher, but we lit Hanukkah candles. Sometimes we had a Seder, but not always. My mother sent me to school on the Jewish holidays because she was working. I was not bat mitzvahed. Despite this very lukewarm Jewishness, I was aware I was Jewish.

You were clearly exasperated by your parents’ refusal to discuss the hardships of their lives and the lives of their parents. This seems to go hand in hand with avoiding conversations about death and the future. Did this frustrate you more as a daughter, or as a storyteller?  

We didn’t have many deep conversations about anything.  It was the way it was.

Can’t We Talk About Something More Pleasant? is full of painful revelations, but it is also very, very funny. Can you describe how it felt to illustrate these intensely difficult, frustrating moments? Were you able to laugh? Was it cathartic?

Sometimes humor is strongest in the middle of awful things, or at least it seems that way to me. And yes, sometimes I did laugh. I was sort of horrified by my mother’s loony stories at the end, but they were pretty funny, too. The word “catharsis” to me implies a purging, a letting go, a leaving behind. I wrote this book to remember them, and the experience.

Did this experience change how you think about aging?

One change is I don’t like second-hand shops as much. I look around and think: this is all somebody’s dead parents’ stuff. I didn’t want MY parents’ old stuff, so why would I want YOURS?

Buy Can’t We Talk About Something More Pleasant here!

Topics: Family, Memoirs
2 Comments
The content of this field is kept private and will not be shown publicly.

Plain text

  • No HTML tags allowed.
  • Web page addresses and email addresses turn into links automatically.
  • Lines and paragraphs break automatically.

On a visit to friends in Mass.I was told the local museum had an exibition of Miss Chast's work and was totally thrilled as I have always loved everything by Miss Chast. With only an hour to see everything (we arrived an hour before closing) five of us ran from picture to picture, hoots of laughter echoing in the near empty rooms. We couldn't get enough! Of course we bought copies of the book. That night,back in N.Y.C. at my friend's apartment (I was visiting from Israel where I've lived for over 40 years) I stayed up late that night laughing and crying at the same time. My parents too had been together for what seemed like forever and had passed away within half a year of each other in 1991-92. I,being an only daughter  and the closest to my mother who passed away after my Father, left Israel and moved in with my mother in her final months. When I

 saw the photo of all the "stuff" left by Miss Chast's parents it took me back to the days I spent clearing out my parents Bronx apartment. It took me a least a month to get rid of thousands of books,records,clothes, and tons of other stuff collected by people who threw little away. I too had helped put my father in a home when my mother could no longer care for him as she had done, totally on her own for over 7 years (he had suffered a stroke). She was strong and dedicated to my father's care and I am sure her wonderful sense of humor was a major factor in her keeping it all together.

 

Miss Chast's book brought back memories happy and sad and I'd like to thank for her masterpiece!

I must admit, I had not been aware of Miss Chast's book until I received an email from JWA. Thank you. I declare it is important to speak, hear, and pray, about places of humanity. Caring for our elders and aging are two such places.

I live on an island in Puget Sound, here on the west coast in Washington state. Monday, I took the ferry to Seattle to have dinner with friends for my birthday. On the drive to the ferry terminal with only minutes to spare, before the ferry was set to sail back to the island--my dear friend was enthusiastically rooting me on--"you're going to make it, you can do it." What I was going to have to do, was climb stairs and run, and I'm not convinced that the 50s are the new 30s. Nevertheless, I decided in order to make the 9 o'clock sailing, it was better to have a mindset with the mantra: yes, I can do it! So I climbed the stairs as though I was in boot camp, ran through the ferry terminal with thoughts of the song--"Don't Rain On My Parade," while imagining that the Red Sea had parted just for me. I arrived at the ticket counter with two minutes to spare--I was greeted with the question: "Are you 65?"

I am always walking through pockets of fog this time of year. My mother's yahrtzeit is June 15th. She was 56 when she died. I'm 54.

I too have the desire to remember . . . I have three parents: my mother, a beautiful and gregarious woman, my father, a passive and quiet man, and then there was my Uncle Ed.

My Uncle Ed was funny, he was quite the gentleman, lover of chocolate, loved Spanish dance and music, he was kind and generous, and he saved everything--the cardboard spools from his adding machines, rubber bands, he had towers of magazines and newspapers that were older than me, empty boxes of Whitman's chocolates . . .

I am an only child. I have had places in my life where I wanted to forget any traces of resemblance to my family, or that I was even part of a larger tribe. Today--I do not want to forget, I want to remember . . .

Oh how I would relish one more visit, and experience the stale and stagnant air that would linger in my nostrils and on my skin for days. I miss the traces of white powder on the floor, that didn't make it onto my uncle's scalp, which was desolate. (right about now my Uncle Ed would say: "careful toots") I miss what seemed like every time we were together, there would be some kind of quirky happenstance. We would burst forth with laughter, and then my uncle would say: "you little gonif you."

My Uncle Ed never married. I was his only next of kin who he adored and loved. My uncle had Alzheimer's disease. For a decade we were lost and trapped in an unearthly system. My plea fell on mostly deaf ears, or ears that were motivated by evil. I had hired strangers to assist with his care. What emerged was horrifying and tragic. They isolated him from me. Changed estate documents and stole financial sustenance. My uncle was deprived his religious civil liberties and rights: he was not permitted to receive religious comfort or blessings from our Rabbi. He was not allowed to be moved to a Jewish nursing facility, but rather was placed in an evangelical Christian nursing center. My uncle was Orthodox. This is where he died.

I want to speak this story . . .

I want to thank you Miss Chast for courage and humor. Thank you for your lovely response to the question: "Was it cathartic?"

I also do not want to forget. I want to remember . . .

Read the latest from JWA from your inbox.

sign up now

Donate

Help us elevate the voices of Jewish women.

donate now

Listen to Our Podcast

Get JWA in your inbox

Read the latest from JWA from your inbox.

sign up now

How to cite this page

Metal, Tara. "The Cartoonist and the Nursing Home: Roz Chast Talks to JWA About Her New Graphic Memoir." 2 June 2014. Jewish Women's Archive. (Viewed on November 21, 2024) <https://jwa.org/blog/interview-with-roz-chast>.