My father was one of 11. He was an attorney. My mother worked for the Syracuse newspaper as a columnist before she became a stay-at-home mother.
Sentiment: NEGATIVE
Well, my dad was the district attorney of New Orleans for about 30 years.
My father still is a lawyer, and my mom was a teacher and then later a career counselor.
My father left school at 14, my mother at 13. My father was clever and well-read. He took a newspaper, always watched the news, discussed it all the time.
My father was a schoolteacher and my mother came from a teacher's family.
My grandfather on my mother's side was a professor of mechanical engineering at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology; my other grandfather was a lawyer, and one time Speaker of the Tennessee House of Representatives.
My mother had been a grade-school teacher, and my father had an eighth-grade education.
My father was a writer and an acting teacher.
My father was a CPA. He worked hard in the aircraft industry, and would come home more and more infrequently. He was about to leave my mother, which he did when I was 15.
My mother worked in advertising and my father was a journalist. But they split up when I was three and I grew up in a single-parent family. My mum brought my brother and I up.
My father was a journalist.