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Powell's Staff: New Literature in Translation: December 2022 and January 2023 (0 comment)
It may be a new year, this may be a list of new books, but our love for literature in translation hasn’t changed at all, and we are so pleased to be enthusiastically recommending these recent releases. On this list, you’ll find a Spanish novel where controversy swirls around a Coca-Cola billboard...
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  • Kelsey Ford: From the Stacks: J. M. Ledgard's Submergence (0 comment)
  • Kelsey Ford: Five Book Friday: Year of the Rabbit (1 comment)

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Let Me Tell You: New Stories, Essays, and Other Writings

by Shirley Jackson
Let Me Tell You: New Stories, Essays, and Other Writings

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ISBN13: 9780812997668
ISBN10: 0812997662
Condition: Standard
DustJacket: Standard

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Staff Top Fives 2015

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Synopses & Reviews

Publisher Comments

From the renowned author of "The Lottery" and The Haunting of Hill House, a spectacular new volume of previously unpublished and uncollected stories, essays, and other writings.

Shirley Jackson is one of the most important American writers of the last hundred years. Since her death in 1965, her place in the landscape of twentieth-century fiction has grown only more exalted.

As we approach the centenary of her birth comes this astonishing compilation of fifty-six pieces — more than forty of which have never been published before. Two of Jackson's children co-edited this volume, culling through the vast archives of their mother's papers at the Library of Congress, selecting only the very best for inclusion.

Let Me Tell You brings together the deliciously eerie short stories Jackson is best known for, along with frank, inspiring lectures on writing; comic essays about her large, boisterous family; and whimsical drawings. Jackson's landscape here is most frequently domestic: dinner parties and bridge, household budgets and homeward-bound commutes, children's games and neighborly gossip. But this familiar setting is also her most subversive: She wields humor, terror, and the uncanny to explore the real challenges of marriage, parenting, and community — the pressure of social norms, the veins of distrust in love, the constant lack of time and space.

For the first time, this collection showcases Shirley Jackson's radically different modes of writing side by side. Together they show her to be a magnificent storyteller, a sharp, sly humorist, and a powerful feminist.

This volume includes a Foreword by the celebrated literary critic and Jackson biographer Ruth Franklin.

Review

"Stunning." O: The Oprah Magazine

Review

"Let us now — at last — celebrate dangerous women writers: how cheering to see justice done with [this collection of] Shirley Jackson's heretofore unpublished works — uniquely unsettling stories and ruthlessly barbed essays on domestic life." Vanity Fair

Review

"Feels like an uncanny dollhouse: Everything perfectly rendered, but something deliciously not quite right." NPR

Review

"There are...times in reading [Jackson's] accounts of desperate women in their thirties slowly going crazy that she seems an American Jean Rhys, other times when she rivals even Flannery O'Connor in her cool depictions of inhumanity and insidious cruelty, and still others when she matches Philip K. Dick at his most hallucinatory. At her best, though, she's just incomparable." The Washington Post

Review

"Offers insights into the vagaries of [Jackson's] mind, which was ruminant and generous, accommodating such diverse figures as Dr. Seuss and Samuel Richardson." The New York Times Book Review (Editors' Choice)

Review

"The best pieces clutch your throat, gently at first, and then with growing strength....The whole collection has a timelessness." The Boston Globe

Review

"[Jackson's] writing, both fiction and nonfiction, has such enduring power — she brings out the darkness in life, the poltergeists shut into everyone's basement, and offers them up, bringing wit and even joy to the examination." USA Today

Review

"The closest we can get to sitting down and having a conversation with...one of the most original voices of her generation." The Huffington Post

Review

"A master of uncanny suspense, Jackson wrote sentences that crept up on the reader, knife in hand." New York

About the Author

Shirley Jackson was born in San Francisco on December 14, 1916. She first received wide critical acclaim for "The Lottery," which was published in The New Yorker in 1948 and went on to become one of the most anthologized stories in American literature. She is the author of six novels, including The Haunting of Hill House and We Have Always Lived in the Castle; four collections of short stories and essays, including Just an Ordinary Day; and two family memoirs, Life Among the Savages and Raising Demons. For many years she lived in North Bennington, Vermont, with her husband, the renowned literary critic Stanley Edgar Hyman, and their four children. She died on August 8, 1965.

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What Our Readers Are Saying

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Average customer rating 5 (1 comments)

`
Jean of the Wood , August 25, 2015
Ever since I read "The Lottery" and learned it was written by the same woman who wrote the delightful short story "Charles," I've been fascinated by Shirley Jackson. It was hard to believe someone who wrote one of the most bone-chilling pieces I'd ever read had also penned one of the most charming. Learning how she wrote "The Lottery" in only two hours after wheeling her baby down the hill to her North Bennington, Vermont village to shop and then back up the hill, imagining that story all the way, added to the intrigue. She mailed it off to the New Yorker and got it published right away, generating more reader mail in response to it than any other New Yorker piece in history, ever. As a kid who grew up during the Fifties and always wanted to be a writer, I was struck by how different Shirley Jackson seemed from the handful of other women authors I’d encountered in school, the vast majority of whom never had children and were long dead. Jackson was about the same age as my own mother and lived in a rambling old Vermont house with four kids, a literary critic/professor husband, and famous houseguests like Ralph Ellison and was both homemaker and family breadwinner in a time when not that many women managed that. She also seemed from her writings to feel alienated and like an outsider much of the time, portraying this with sharp humor in her family pieces and heartbreaking pain or horror in many of her stories and novels. I was captivated by the unique blend of homey comfort and off-kiltered obsession, the natural beauty and vivid, idiosyncratic characters, the menace and cruelty of her worlds. Edited by two of Jackson’s four children, Let Me Tell You includes unpublished and uncollected stories, essays and reviews, humor and family pieces, articles about craft, and the author’s whimsical line drawings. There’s wonderful wit, pathos, strangeness, writing advice, social commentary, and fascinating glimpses into Jackson’s life and writing process. Though not all the equal of her most powerful work, many pieces wowed, amused, moved, disturbed, or intrigued me, and others reflected the tremendous range and development of her writing. It feels like such a privilege to see her early work, drafts and work in progress and to learn more about her thoughts, feelings, and family life. This is a lovely, very personal seeming book and one well worth owning in hardcover.

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Product Details

ISBN:
9780812997668
Binding:
Hardcover
Publication date:
08/04/2015
Publisher:
PENGUIN RANDOM HOUSE
Pages:
416
Height:
9.10
Width:
6.60
Thickness:
1.30
Illustration:
Yes
Author:
Shirley Jackson
Editor:
Sarah Hyman Dewitt
Foreword:
Ruth Franklin
Editor:
Laurence Hyman
Subject:
Literature-A to Z
Subject:
Stories (single author)

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$10.95
List Price:$30.00
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