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  • Alice Munro, Queenie & Coercive Control

    Alice Munro, Queenie & Coercive Control

    One remarkable thing about Alice Munro: her ability to see aspects of psychology which only drew public attention decades later. In “The Bear Came Over The Mountain” we have a beautiful character study of a philandering man and, his self-justification for wrong-doing and what has since been called sexual solipsism. In “Queenie” Munro paints a…

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    April 25, 2019
  • Uncanny by Paul Jennings Hi-Lo Short Stories

    Uncanny by Paul Jennings Hi-Lo Short Stories

    Uncanny is a hi-lo short story collection by Australian author Paul Jennings, first published 1988. The original ‘uncanny’ stories were by British writer May Sinclair (1863 – 1946). I read a collection of Sinclair’s uncanny short stories (1923) a few years ago and wasn’t really moved by them. This is because so many writers have

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    March 26, 2019
  • Flowering Judas by Katherine Anne Porter Short Story Analysis

    Flowering Judas by Katherine Anne Porter Short Story Analysis

    “Flowering Judas” is the standout short story by Pulizer Prize winning Katherine Anne Porter, included in a collection published 1930 when Porter was 40. This short story reminds me of “A Dill Pickle” by Katherine Mansfield. Both stories are clearly about the way in which women are socially acculturated into providing emotional labour for men,

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    March 24, 2019
  • When Everyone Else Is A Ghost

    When Everyone Else Is A Ghost

    You may not believe in ghosts to enjoy ghost stories. I don’t either. But once you understand how ghost stories work, you’ll understand how tools of persuasion are used in other realms. Studying the ghost story is a fun way to study the techniques of persuasion. Ghost stories have plenty of other functions, too. There

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    March 21, 2019
  • Unbelievable by Paul Jennings Hi-lo Short Fiction

    Unbelievable by Paul Jennings Hi-lo Short Fiction

    Unbelievable is a short story collection by Australian author Paul Jennings, copyrighted 1986. These are tall tales for eight-year-olds. Australia has a long history of tall tales, and Jennings very successfully adapted the techniques for a child audience. The 1980s was the decade of the irreverent male children’s author. Roald Dahl was the stand-out giant

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    March 20, 2019
  • Unreal by Paul Jennings Hi-lo Short Fiction

    Unreal by Paul Jennings Hi-lo Short Fiction

    Unreal is a collection of 8 short stories, first published 1985. This was the book that really kicked-off Jennings’ career as a children’s author.

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    March 19, 2019
  • Big Blonde by Dorothy Parker Analysis

    Big Blonde by Dorothy Parker Analysis

    “Big Blonde” (1929) by Dorothy Parker is a short story in five parts, included in various collections. We can read it for free online. The ‘Good Sport’ girl is the grandmother of Gillian Flynn’s ‘Cool Girl’. When Gillian Flynn published Gone Girl, our culture had a new phrase to describe the kind of woman who

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    February 19, 2019
  • What Kind Of Furniture Would Jesus Pick by Annie Proulx Short Story Analysis

    What Kind Of Furniture Would Jesus Pick by Annie Proulx Short Story Analysis

    “What Kind of Furniture Would Jesus Pick?” (2003) by Annie Proulx is the story of Gilbert Wolfscale, whose rabid devotion to his ranch drives off his wife and sons. You can read this one online. SETTING OF “WHAT KIND OF FURNITURE WOULD JESUS PICK?” This story reminds me of Larry McMurtry’s Hud, probably because it’s

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    February 12, 2019
  • Man Crawling Out Of Trees by Annie Proulx Short Story Analysis

    Man Crawling Out Of Trees by Annie Proulx Short Story Analysis

    “Man Crawling Out Of Trees” is a short story by Annie Proulx, included in her Bad Dirt collection (2004). Many of the stories in this collection are in the tall story, brutal, regional, humorous tradition, and readers who don’t share Proulx’s sense of humour haven’t connected to these stories as well as they connected to…

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    January 27, 2019
  • Silence by Alice Munro Short Story Analysis

    Silence by Alice Munro Short Story Analysis

    “Silence” is a short story by Alice Munro, one of three in a triptych about a woman called Juliet. The first are “Chance” and “Soon“. All three are published in the Runaway collection (2004). [“Silence”] brings to the foreground a theme that runs through many stories by Alice Munro—the role of silence within the network

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    January 22, 2019
  • The Symbolism of Trains In Literature

    The Symbolism of Trains In Literature

    Why are trains so useful to storytellers? In stories, trains play a functional role, getting your characters from one place to another. But there’s more to it than that. Perhaps we encounter storytellers on trains more than in any other place.

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    January 13, 2019
  • Sarah Marshall Has A Stalker, For All The Receptionist Knows

    Sarah Marshall Has A Stalker, For All The Receptionist Knows

    Forgetting Sarah Marshall is a silly, fun film, designed to appeal to an audience of teenage boys.  The film was produced by Judd Apatow. The script was written by its star, Jason Segel. Some critics have applauded the film for turning the ‘crazy ex-girlfriend’ trope on its head. (Inversion does not equal subversion.) I don’t

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    December 19, 2018
  • A Dictionary of Witch Words

    A Dictionary of Witch Words

    The definition of witch changes over time. The word witch dates from around 800 AD. It originally referred to men who practise witchcraft but 200 years later referred to female magicians and sorceresses. Later it meant women who were meant to cooperate with the devil or other evil spirits.

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    December 15, 2018
  • “Good People” Is A Terrible Film

    “Good People” Is A Terrible Film

    Good People is a 2014 film with a screenplay written by Kelly Masterson, based on the novel by Marcus Sakey. Good People is an excellent example of a film with terrible female characters, created by a roomful of men.

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    December 10, 2018
  • A Dill Pickle by Katherine Mansfield Short Story Analysis

    A Dill Pickle by Katherine Mansfield Short Story Analysis

    “A Dill Pickle” is a 1917 short story by Katherine Mansfield. Over the course of a single café scene, a woman meets up with a former beau. This is a feminist story about how men and women tend to communicate, and illuminates Mansfield’s deep interest in psychology. I’m in a restaurant in Cambridge and this

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    December 5, 2018
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