Sadness darkens The Reading Life World. Please share with us your most cherished memories of reading his works.
Mr. Trevor, you will be truly missed but never forgotten. Thank you for everything.
Mel u
Ambrosia Boussweau
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| "I can't wait for Gothic Week" Carmilla |
"The Woman of the House" opens with a crippled man bargaining with two men over the price of painting his house. (I have seen a good bit of bargaining in the Irish short stories I have read this week.) Martina lives with the man. There relationship is a bit unclear. Martina once had hopes for a good happy life now she just strives to get by. She lets the butcher fumble her body in meat locker and does not have to pay for her chicken and pork. She takes the money this saves her from the funds the man gives her and hides it. As the story plays out we learn more of the history of the two painters, displaced persons from Poland now often called Gypsies. We come to try to understand the woman. The story is perfectly written and for sure kept me interested and wanting more. Like many an Irish short story, it deals with people on the fringes of society, outsiders, misfits and outcasts. I saw in this story and elsewhere this week that one can be an exile without moving away.![]() |
| "Please stay around for the Party"-Rory |