Updated
Updated · The FP · Jul 10
Joseph Massey Reconnected With Estranged Family After 10 Years, Aided by 'Little House on the Prairie'
Updated
Updated · The FP · Jul 10

Joseph Massey Reconnected With Estranged Family After 10 Years, Aided by 'Little House on the Prairie'

2 articles · Updated · The FP · Jul 10

Summary

  • Seven years ago, poet Joseph Massey resumed contact with his mother and stepfather after a decade-long estrangement, he writes in a weekly literary column tied to Netflix's new "Little House on the Prairie" adaptation.
  • Massey says the original television series helped him pursue that reunion in 2019 as he tried to rebuild a sense of self and home after being pushed out of mainstream arts and letters during the #MeToo movement.
  • His account roots the break in a violent, unstable upbringing outside Philadelphia: divorced parents, a stepfather prone to screaming and punching holes in walls, and a family shaped by factory work, addiction and broken homes.
  • The essay uses the show's family-centered vision as a lens on reconciliation, turning the Netflix revival into a reflection on memory, damage and the possibility of repair.

Insights

How did a controversial TV classic help a poet reconcile with the family he once fled?
As a classic story is rewritten for today, can a person also rewrite their own painful past?