The Locator -- [(author = "Jackson Shirley 1916-1965")]

68 records matched your query       


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03004aim a22003975a 4500
001 1B3087CCA18B11E6AED112AEDAD10320
003 SILO
005 20161103010209
006 m     o  h        
007 sz zunnnnnuned
007 cr nnannnuuuua
008 130915s2010    xxunnn es      f  n eng d
020    $a 148155364X (sound recording : hoopla Audio Book)
020    $a 9781481553643 (sound recording : hoopla Audio Book)
028 42 $a MWT10025792
040    $a Midwest $d SILO
100 1  $a Jackson, Shirley, $d 1916-1965.
245 10 $a We have always lived in the castle $h [electronic resource].
250    $a Unabridged.
260    $a [United States] : $b Blackstone Audio, Inc. : $c 2010.
300    $a 1 online resource (1 audio file (5hr., 33 min.)) : $b digital.
506    $a Digital content provided by hoopla.
511 1  $a Read by Bernadette Dunne.
520    $a We Have Always Lived in the Castle, Shirley Jackson's 1962 novel, is full of a macabre and sinister humor, and Merricat herself, its amiable narrator, is one of the great unhinged heroines of literature. Merricat has developed an idiosyncratic system of rules and protective magic, burying talismanic objects beneath the family estate, nailing them to trees, and ritualistically revisiting them. She has created a protective web to guard against the distrust and hostility of neighboring villagers. Or so she believes. But at last the magic fails. A stranger arrives-cousin Charles, with his eye on the Blackwood fortune. He disturbs the sisters' careful habits, installing himself at the head of the family table, unearthing Merricat's treasures, talking privately to Constance about "normal lives" and "boy friends." Unable to drive him away by either polite or occult means, Merricat adopts more desperate methods. The result is crisis and tragedy, the revelation of a terrible secret, the convergence of the villagers upon the house, and a spectacular unleashing of collective spite. The sisters are propelled further into seclusion and solipsism, abandoning old habits in favor of an ever-narrowing circuit of ritual and shadow. They have themselves become talismans, to be alternately demonized and propitiated with gifts. Jackson's novel emerges less as a study in eccentricity and more-like some of her other fictions-as a powerful critique of the anxious, ruthless processes involved in the maintenance of normalcy itself.
538    $a Mode of access: World Wide Web.
650  0 $a Families $v Fiction.
650  0 $a Castles $v Fiction.
655  7 $a Gothic fiction. $2 gsafd
700 1  $a Dunne, Bernadette. $4 nrt
710 2  $a hoopla digital.
856 40 $u https://www.hoopladigital.com/title/10025792 $z Instantly available on hoopla.
856 42 $z Cover image $u https://d2snwnmzyr8jue.cloudfront.net/bsa_9781441734310_180.jpeg
941    $a 2
952    $l GFPE771 $d 20171128013412.0
952    $l CDPF771 $d 20161103011522.0
956    $a http://locator.silo.lib.ia.us/search.cgi?index_0=id&term_0=1B3087CCA18B11E6AED112AEDAD10320

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