My Life and Hard Times This short autobiographical book is James Thurber’s comic portrait of his childhood in early-20th-century Columbus, Ohio. In nine linked sketches he recounts the eccentricities of his family, neighbors, and pets, turning ordinary mishaps into absurd farce. We meet his nervous, hypochondriac mother; his hot-tempered but hapless father; a bullying older brother; and a parade of unforgettable minor characters—from a hard-drinking grandfather to a perpetually escaping dog named Muggs. The episodes include household disasters, mistaken alarms about burglars, and surreal social misunderstandings, all described in Thurber’s understated, deadpan style. Although the tone is nostalgic and playful, the stories also hint at the anxieties of growing up in a chaotic, unpredictable world. Interspersed with his own line drawings, the book established Thurber as a master of American humor, blending memoir and tall tale to show how a shy, near-sighted boy developed the wry outlook that would define his later work.
