Top Tens – Fantasy & SF: Top 10 Fantasy Books (Special Mention: Cult & Pulp) (5) Shirley Jackson – The Lottery

Creative Education 2008 hardcover edition cover art

 

 

(5) SHIRLEY JACKSON –

“THE LOTTERY” (1948)

 

Like the Awards named after her, Shirley Jackson is known for stories of psychological suspense, horror and dark fantasy, ever so subtly bubbling to the surface of our world. This is amply demonstrated by her most famous story “The Lottery”, and indeed, in her collection of stories, named for it – The Lottery and Other Stories. One might consider the nature of her stories as fantasy to be arguable, but as I said, the fantasy in her stories is a subtle intrusion into our world – maybe mundane, maybe magical. The Lottery and Other Stories bore the subtitle The Adventures of James Harris, for a recurring figure in the stories of that collection, who may or may not be supernatural – he certainly seems to be a daemon lover or Dionysian force, complete with his retinue of maenads (who can then take over people’s apartments by sheer force of persuasion).

As for “The Lottery”, it has an ambience of dark fantasy to it – set, it seems, in an alternative United States. One in which small American towns casually celebrate an annual festival in much the same way as any other annual event – a lottery which the winner does not seem eager for the prize (and indeed vociferously protests its unfairness), but which the townsfolk insists on giving to her. Because, you know, the crops and harvest depend on it. Cue the stones…or in the words of John Keats’ Ode on a Grecian Urn – “Who are these coming to the sacrifice?”

Of course, the story’s power is in its symbolism, resonant of so many images of the dark underbelly of American society, or the American Dream. After all, it doesn’t take too much to imagine something like the Lottery – perhaps not so blunt of course, but still, you know…

As newscaster Kent Brockman referred to it in an episode of The Simpsons, it is a chilling tale of social conformity – and not, much to Homer’s disappointment on checking it out of the library, a guide to winning the lottery.

 

RATING:
A-TIER (TOP TIER)

Heart of Starkness – Eightfold Path 5: Serpent & Beast

Art by Chris Weston of God as depicted in Canon Fodder by Mark Millar for 2000 AD – one of my favorite depictions of God in popular culture with all the layers (and Dali-esque elephants) Weston added (image cropped for fair use)

 

 

 

I am the serpent of my Eden and the beast of my apocalypse –

I rise writhing from my own resurrection

(Mr Mojo Risin’)

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I am horned god and hanged man –

hell-harrowed hero and sweet-tongued trickster,

satyr, savior, sorrower and stranger

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