"All this he saw, for one moment breathless and intense, vivid on the morning sky; and still, as he looked, he lived; and still, as he lived, he wondered."

Shirley Jackson’s The Lottery (and other stories)

Shirley Jackson might be better known for her haunting, psychological horror novels such as We Have Always Lived in the Castle and The Haunting of Hill House, but her short horror stories are nothing but extraordinary.

And those collected in this Little Clothebound Penguin are horror stories, alright.
A woman is sent out of the office on a commission and she’s haunted by the idea of being at the centre of a game. Horror.
A woman, recently moved into the countryside, gets a call from her neighbour that their dog has been seen killing chicken and, while she seeks counsel on how to educate the dog, she only gets advice on how to kill her.
Horror.
On her wedding day, a woman frantically seeks her missing betrothed, only to find out he might have never existed.
Horror.
The perfect housewife’s routine is shattered by some distant relations going around her town saying they’re her friends and people even like them. The nerve. The horror.
And then of course there’s the titular story.

Shirley Jackson writes horror, yes, horror stories of everyday life, with a tinge of the supernatural now and then.
And they’re awesome.

architecture, engineering and construction

BIM and Facility Management, with a little help from LEGO and AI

There is a question we often forget to ask, and it became the centrepiece of a three-hour workshop I delivered last week at Politecnico di Milano as part of a BIM Management master’s programme. When an information model is delivered to the client,how do we

Read More »
books and literature

Osamu Dazai’s The Student and Other Stories

The collection I have, features three stories: The Student (Joseito), Applause (Kassai), and The Tale of Urashima (Urashimasan). They’re very different, not so much in mood (it’s Dazai Osamu after all) but in scope and purpose, and that makes this book a little weird. The

Read More »
books and literature

Carson McCuller’s The Ballad of the Sad Cafè

Carson McCullers (1917 – 1967) was an influential American novelist, playwright, and short-story writer renowned for her depictions of the spiritual isolation, identity struggles, and inner lives of outcasts in the American South. Her acclaimed debut novel is The Heart Is a Lonely Hunter (1940),

Read More »
Share on LinkedIn
Throw on Reddit
Roll on Tumblr
Mail it
1 Comment
  • Casey Davis
    Posted at 23:30h, 29 May Reply

    Haven’t thought about The Lottery in ages. What do you think makes it stand out in Jackson’s body of work?

Post A Comment

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

RELATED POSTS

Osamu Dazai’s The Student and Other Stories

The collection I have, features three stories: The Student (Joseito), Applause (Kassai), and The Tale of Urashima (Urashimasan). They’re very different, not so much in mood (it’s Dazai Osamu after all) but in scope and purpose, and that makes this book a little weird. The

Read More

Carson McCuller’s The Ballad of the Sad Cafè

Carson McCullers (1917 – 1967) was an influential American novelist, playwright, and short-story writer renowned for her depictions of the spiritual isolation, identity struggles, and inner lives of outcasts in the American South. Her acclaimed debut novel is The Heart Is a Lonely Hunter (1940),

Read More