I love Grace Paley's stories and poetry and she is to me an icon of American literature. I once sat at her knee as she read at Bennington (Vermont). It was the summer of 1979, and I was there for a writer's retreat for a month, listening on a regular basis to writers reading their work, talking with us about writing, and all of us sat cross-legged, spread around her on the floor like birds awaiting crumbs of warmth and insight and love and sharp, unpretentious observation. This, her last book, is far from the quality I became accustomed to from her, I say sadly, but it does help me recall her voice and spirit.
To the end, she graciously and bravely faces her last days, and the last poems of the book are really the best, and worth reading, if one is curious about how one, in one's eighties, faces the day and the darkness. These poems are not among her best work as a poet or writer, but her voice in these poems seems consistent with the voice of Grace Paley that I knew and loved more than thirty years ago.