"There is nothing unusual about the foot, except that it is seven meters
high." Nineteen people are dragging, by means of a cable, an immense
carcass through the countryside. The carcass is that of the Dead Father,
a half-dead, half-alive, part-mechanical, wise, vain, powerful being who
still has hopes for himself, although he is, effectively, dead. Thomas,
Julie, Edmund, Emma, and the others variously insult, placate, cater to,
and defend the Dead Father as the procession moves through the country
of the Wends, the territory of the Great Father Serpent, and a variety
of encounters and explorations toward its mysterious goal.
In the austere, extraordinary prose that strongly influenced a
generation of fiction writers, Donald Barthelme offered in The Dead
Father a glimpse into his unique fictional universe: a many-shaded
landscape of first and last things, striking, comic, manic, inevitable.