My Father’s Axe” is a short story by Tim Winton.

“My Father’s Axe” is a short story by Tim Winton. 
It appears in his collection Scission (1985).
The story is narrated by a man who discovers that his father’s old axe is missing. This axe holds sentimental value because it reminds him of his father and their shared past. He searches for it around the house and becomes increasingly disturbed by its disappearance.
As he looks for it, he begins reflecting on change and continuity — how things are replaced and yet seem to stay the same. He recalls that the axe has had its handle and blade replaced over the years, yet it’s still called “his father’s axe.”

By the end, the missing axe becomes a symbol of identity, memory, and loss. The narrator’s frustration and confusion mirror his deeper anxiety about change — how time transforms people, objects, and relationships until their original essence seems lost.

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Summary for At the Church Door

Like an Old Proud King in a Parable A. J.M. Smith, Summary for BA Students.

Summary for the Play Strife by John Galsworthy