The Letters of Shirley Jackson
By Shirley Jackson
Edited by Laurence Jackson Hyman
Contributions by Bernice M. Murphy
By Shirley Jackson
Edited by Laurence Jackson Hyman
Contributions by Bernice M. Murphy
By Shirley Jackson
Edited by Laurence Jackson Hyman
Contributions by Bernice M. Murphy
By Shirley Jackson
Edited by Laurence Jackson Hyman
Contributions by Bernice M. Murphy
By Shirley Jackson
Read by Kirsten Potter, Gary Bennett and Linda Jones
Edited by Laurence Jackson Hyman
Contributions by Bernice M. Murphy
By Shirley Jackson
Read by Kirsten Potter, Gary Bennett and Linda Jones
Edited by Laurence Jackson Hyman
Contributions by Bernice M. Murphy
Category: Essays & Literary Collections | Arts & Entertainment Biographies & Memoirs | Literary Figure Biographies & Memoirs
Category: Essays & Literary Collections | Arts & Entertainment Biographies & Memoirs | Literary Figure Biographies & Memoirs
Category: Essays & Literary Collections | Arts & Entertainment Biographies & Memoirs | Literary Figure Biographies & Memoirs | Audiobooks
-
$22.00
Jul 19, 2022 | ISBN 9780593134658
-
Jul 13, 2021 | ISBN 9780593134665
-
Jul 13, 2021 | ISBN 9780593412145
1138 Minutes
Buy the Audiobook Download:
YOU MAY ALSO LIKE
Trouble with Lichen
Ethan Frome
The Return of the Soldier
Out There
Manhattan Transfer
The Best of Everything
The Midwich Cuckoos
Web
The Legend of Sleepy Hollow and Other Stories
Praise
“A can’t-miss literary artifact from one of America’s most important authors.”—USA Today
“Shirley Jackson’s letters could make an errand more exciting than your entire life.”—Los Angeles Times
“A work of art in its own right . . . as vivid and subversive as her fiction.”—Chicago Review of Books
“[These letters are] glorious additions to [Jackson’s] oeuvre. They are intimate, invigorating, essential.”—Toronto Star
“Startlingly vivacious.”—The New Republic
“Many writers feel that the self who writes exists in a partially unknowable state, separate from the self who goes about her worldly business, talking with friends and colleagues, cooking dinner, ferrying her children around. With Jackson, the division seems especially vivid. . . . [Here], the inner world that writes gives voice to the outer world that doesn’t.”—The New York Times Book Review
“[Jackson’s] fiction, full of misanthropy, madness and murder, tends to be viewed through the lens of her personal torments and, more generally, of the misogyny of the age. What is striking about Jackson’s letters, however, is that while they testify to pretty outrageous domestic double standards . . . they show very little sign of unhappiness. The mood of the missives is buoyant, garrulous and eager to amuse, and while Jackson often seems stressed and exasperated, she’s rarely despairing. . . . The labors of domesticity and artistry are fused in these letters in a way that seems to me unique.”—The Wall Street Journal
“This collection, edited by Jackson’s son, brings together one of Jackson’s other great literary loves apart from short stories: the letter. Written in a distinctive lowercase typewriter font on yellow paper, the correspondence offers another view of the wit that permeated Jackson’s fiction.”—The New York Times
“The breadth of Shirley Jackson’s artistry is still being recognized. This intimate collection of her correspondence makes us feel the odds against which this working mother, daughter, and wife accomplished what she did, and at what costs. This book is surely as much a feminist document as a literary one.”—Jonathan Lethem
“The Letters of Shirley Jackson offers so much more than a simple peek behind the curtain of one of the most important literary lives of the twentieth century. Her letters are full of warmth and insight while displaying her uncompromising wit and talent, as well as a melancholic, haunted vulnerability. . . . A book to be cherished and reread.”—Paul Tremblay
“This collection was invigorating and life-sustaining for me to read, coming to me exactly when I needed it, in a way that feels like a miracle (or like someone cast a spell). These letters are so warm and funny and thoughtful and wicked, revealing an unexpectedly rich way of looking at the world that makes space for both love and horror.”—Kristen Roupenian
21 Books You’ve Been Meaning to Read
Just for joining you’ll get personalized recommendations on your dashboard daily and features only for members.
Find Out More Join Now Sign In