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8 responses to “Short Story Sunday: The Lottery”
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Oh I do so agree with you. I came across this in a book of American short stories and really wish I hadn't read it. I've just finished a book of short stories by Edith Pearlman: 'Binocular Vision' and I think she is the best short- story writer ever … even better than Alice Munro! Unfortunately, I borrowed it from our wonderful local library (in Rutland) so couldn't copy your method of reading one a week and savouring them. Thank-you for an inspiring blog, it says much more to me than those written by people who seem inundated with free books.
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Thank you for the kind comment, I like to be able to read what I want, when I want! I've never come across Edith Pearlman, but I enjoyed the Alice Munro collection I read, so I'll try and read some of her work. Not sure if our library will have it though.
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If you want to try a completely different type of book by Shirley Jackson, there is Life Among the Savages, and its sequel Raising Demons. Warm, funny family memoirs – but not sappy or sentimental. I read them long before The Lottery & love them still.
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I have to agree that The Lottery is a very shocking story. I had no idea what was going on but just 'knew' it wasn't going to end well. My own particular favourite short story collection is Minnie's Room: The Peacetime Stories of Molly Panter-Downes. I thought each story was a perfect little package.
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Lisa, thank you for the recommendations. I will try them – they sound much more my style!
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Minnie's Room is one of my favourites. I hadn't read a lot of short stories before I started this book, and I think it's a perfect introduction to the genre, with lots of different writers, and different styles. There's only been a handful of stories I didn't like.
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This is Shirley Jackson`s most notorious piece of work, but please don`t write her off because of it! Somewhere I read a most enlightening account by the author about how she wrote The Lottery and what the overwhelming response was to its appearance in The New Yorker – I believe it was in an anthology of her work. Anyway, it would make you view it in a completely different light, and yes, I believe the allegorical slant was deliberate. Talk about the banality of evil… I`ll see if I can find that reference.
Please do try Life Among the Savages – it is a rather delicious family memoir, and nothing like this short piece of magazine fiction.
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Oh, thank you – if you can find the reference I'd like to read it. Lisa mentioned Life Among the Savages as well, and it sounds much more my kind of book. I should give her another go, because I had a similar experience with Katherine Mansfield. I hated her short story in this Persephone collection, but loved the ones I have read since then.
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