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We Have Always Lived in the Castle
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Paul
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rated it 4 stars
Oct 03, 2015 01:15AM

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Barbara I definitely recommend the audiobook. The book has a creepy menacing and the audiobook definitely brings that...although perhaps it wasn't always the greatest choice on my late night commute home from work.

I'll get it today or tomorrow. Thanks.


I just finished this. I would never picked this out myself and yet I enjoyed it. I think I would say appreciated it. It was certainly peculiar. I can't wait until more people read it to discuss it.


I just finished this. I would never picked this out myself and yet I enjoyed it. I think I would say appreciated it. It..."
I have this next on my pile, so hoping to get to it in the next few days, after I get through all my mid-semester grading! :)


This book was certainly a creepy read...and as I posted in my review when I finish it earlier this month...perhaps not the best choice for me to listen to on my late night commute home...The audio narration in the Audible version adds tremendously to the sense of foreboding. There were times I found myself having to pause the book in favor of music on that drive home, because it was too creepy. I also like how Shirley Jackson use child like rhymes and games.
I would get "Merricat, said Connie, would you like a cup of tea? Oh, no, said Merricat, you’ll poison me. Merricat, said Connie, would you like to go to sleep? Down in the boneyard ten feet deep!" stuck in my head at random moments of the day.
There's also description early on of Mary Catherine treating her journey into town as board game she has to play. As someone who has occasionally suffer from social anxiety (although much less severe), I can relate to her sense of isolation and treating the trip as something to be gotten through.
I would get "Merricat, said Connie, would you like a cup of tea? Oh, no, said Merricat, you’ll poison me. Merricat, said Connie, would you like to go to sleep? Down in the boneyard ten feet deep!" stuck in my head at random moments of the day.
There's also description early on of Mary Catherine treating her journey into town as board game she has to play. As someone who has occasionally suffer from social anxiety (although much less severe), I can relate to her sense of isolation and treating the trip as something to be gotten through.
Oh and by the way Susan I think you should avoidThe Wasp Factory. I don't think it'd be your cup of tea.

I could only get it in audio and large print format, so this was also new for me, gave both formats a try for the first time, still not sure about audio but large print was very easy on the eye's !!

I listened to the audiobook and thought the narration was great (bernadette dunne). The rhythms was really creepy. These days Merricat would be labled with some "ism" and treated. That might even have saved her families life! I would query the sanity of constance. If only because she proved such easy pickings for the evil cousin. Did julien truelly believe Merricat was dead? I can't recall if he acknowledged during the book. Or did he mean she was dead to him? Or was he just an injured old man subject to confusion???

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I am given to understand that many of you had never heard of Shirley Jackson. I was introduced to her work in high school, actually, in the 1960s, where we studied The Lottery. An odd story that, according to our educational system at the time, was considered an in-depth look at human behavior by an outstanding modern day author. I have enjoyed everything I have read by Jackson. I recently purchased a book of her short stories, newly published.Let Me Tell You: New Stories, Essays, and Other Writings. The first story reminded me if an old Twilight zone episode. There is also a very short writing at the beginning that one might totally miss the true horror if not read carefully. I have also read The Haunting of Hill House.
Books mentioned in this topic
Let Me Tell You: New Stories, Essays, and Other Writings (other topics)The Haunting of Hill House (other topics)
The Wasp Factory (other topics)