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The Bird's Nest
 
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The Bird's Nest [Paperback]

Shirley Jackson (Author)
4.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (10 customer reviews)


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Product Details

  • Paperback: 288 pages
  • Publisher: Popular; Popular Library Edition edition (1976)
  • Language: English
  • ASIN: B000VO9VBY
  • Product Dimensions: 6.7 x 4.1 x 0.7 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 3.2 ounces
  • Average Customer Review: 4.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (10 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #2,607,382 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

Shirley Jackson was born in San Francisco in 1919. She first received wide critical acclaim for her short story 'The Lottery', which was published in 1948. Her novels--which include The Sundial, The Bird's Nest, Hangsaman, The Road through the Wall, We Have Always Lived in the Castle and The Haunting of Hill House--are characterised by her use of realistic settings for tales that often involve elements of horror and the occult. Raising Demons and Life Among the Savages are her two works of nonfiction. Come Along With Me is a collection of stories, lectures, and part of the novel she was working on when she died in 1965.

 

Customer Reviews

10 Reviews
5 star:
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4 star:
 (2)
3 star:
 (3)
2 star:    (0)
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Average Customer Review
4.2 out of 5 stars (10 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Shirley Jackson Advanced, April 9, 2005
My favorite Shirley Jackson book has always been "We have always lived in the Castle". However, although "The Bird's nest" was only Shirley Jackson's third novel, it is, so I feel, "Shirley Jackson - advanced course". This is an elaborate story which incorporates all classic Jackson fingerprints and yet involved a research and a unique way of writing. A seemingly "normal" story (at least this is how it starts...) that somehow turns - the moment cannot be precisely captured - into a haunting, creepy tale. This is a book you read and have to keep going back and checking once and again for the hints you seemed to miss in your reading. You understand the words but do not always understand why regular words give you such an uncomfortable feeling. This is by the way is a feeling which is very familiar to Jackson's readers. Also, the overall sense is that a secret clouds the whole story and that if you would have paid more attention and read more attentively, maybe you could have figured this one out, as Jackson always seems to leave hints along the way. The body of Miss R., a niece to Aunt Morgen and a patient of Dr. Wright (the two other main characters of the story) is a "bird's nest " to four conflicting characters, each one a different person with a different character, and even different facial expressions (the Dr. can tell who is standing in front of him even before she speaks). All these four personalities are fighting for dominance over the "awareness" of the young girl. The story is told in a way I never met in Jackson's books, where each chapter presents the story from a different angel, although only Doctor Wright speaks in his own narrative voice. The other chapters present one main character but from a side look.
The battle is always, as with Shirley Jackson, with one's mind, a subject that interested her immensely. Like Natalie from "Hangsaman" who imagines/befriends the "girl Tony" (and the reader keeps asking himself if she is true or just fictitious), and like "The haunting of hill house" where we learn, maybe too late, that the real battle is what goes inside the mind of the heroine, in the "Bird's nest", the battle is over the mind of Elizabeth R.
It is the goal of Dr. Wright (and the reader) to understand the source of this personality split. Interesting to note that this battle or conflict is, according to the famous psychologist Erik Erikson, the crisis appropriate to the age of young adulthood. Erikson describes this crisis as "Intimacy vs. Isolation" and declares that the most important events of this stage are love relationships. You are not developmentally complete until you are capable of intimacy, but an individual who has not developed a sense of identity usually will fear a committed relationship and may retreat into isolation.
A split of one person and the constant battle between being complete or separate, close or withdrawn is thus a recurrent motif in Shirley Jackson (Constance the homey and Merricat the bold in "We have always lived in the castle", Natalie and the girl Tony, etc.). In the "Bird's nest" however Jackson seems to have taken this issue one step further. She was fascinated with the subject of multiple personalities and therefore has made a serious research before writing this book. Her research has convinced her for example that a multiple personalities case needed to have an act of sexual abuse as its cornerstone. She therefore installed the hints of such act with the description of Robin, about which Betsy tells the man in the restaurant.
There are many layers to this story, nothing is ever really clear and the story can be analyzed in many different ways. Also very interesting to understand the story in light of Shirley Jackson's personality and her fascination with the subject, a fascination that her biographers claim to stem from her feeling that she herself had several personalities within.
Basically the story is read as a thriller. You want to read further on as you have to know what will happen next and what personality will gain ownership of Miss R. For me the reading has also been another stage of my learning and admiration of this powerful author. It seems that with every book you get a little closer to further understanding this elaborate mind.


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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Will the real Elizabeth Richmond please stand up?, April 6, 2002
This review is from: The Bird's Nest (Hardcover)
No writer has ever plumbed the depths of psychology as deeply as Shirley Jackson. While not as powerful as We Have Always Lived in the Castle or even Hangsaman, this novel does succeed in giving the reader a remarkable look into the mind of a disturbed individual. Elizabeth Richmond is a perfectly drab, mousy creature wanting nothing more than to pass her days as quietly and demurely as possible. A fragile emotional soul, she is tormented by terrible migraines and backaches. Her problems mount when her aunt begins accusing her of terrible things she has no recollection of doing. A trip to the doctor results in a referral to the good Doctor Wright, a man practicing psychology while proudly announcing he is not a psychologist. Using hypnosis, Dr. Wright comes to recognize and converse with three distinct personalities in his patient--the quiet, demure Elizabeth, the exceedingly nice and wonderful Beth, and the childish, prankster Betsy. Betsy, gaining more dominance over her other selves, manages to escape to New York to search for her mother. It is there that a fourth personality emerges, this one a spoiled brat who cares only about the money she is supposed to inherit. As the story progresses, Elizabeth's split personalities fight for dominance, often switching back and forth between one and another.

Jackson gives us two (or maybe I should say five) viewpoints on the young lady's case. Most often, we are allowed to see things from Elizabeth's viewpoint(s), but in sections we are given an external, non-clinical account of events by Doctor Wright. We also see and learn much about Elizabeth's Aunt Morgen, who is quite a character and rather unbalanced herself. As the doctor pursues his therapy, we learn many things about Elizabeth's mother and Aunt Morgen's less than sisterly relationship with her, we pick up confusing images of a character named Robin from Elizabeth's early childhood, and we find a reference to Elizabeth's four selves once going in search of a bird's nest. I have to admit the bird nest thing escapes my comprehension, and I am still quite muddled about the Robin character. Of course, if the entire story made sense, this would not be Shirley Jackson. As it is, this is a wonderful example of character development as only Jackson could provide. Aunt Morgen is almost as mysterious as Elizabeth herself. While I sympathized greatly with three of Elizabeth's personalities, including the mischievous one, I strongly disliked the fourth. With the constant switching between selves, I found myself hating Elizabeth one second, and caring for her the next. I regarded Aunt Morgen at different times as a fool, a wretch, a loving aunt, and a neurotic. Dr. Wright is a rather ambivalent character, although he is given to fits of exasperation when Elizabeth's case or her aunt frustrate him. Jackson ingeniously made one of the four personalities left-handed; this allowed her a most telling and effective means by which to have two personalities communicate simultaneously. I do not know how much scientists knew about multiple personalities during the time this novel was written around 1950, but I am sure Jackson possessed insights more penetrating than those of many clinicians. Few psychological horror novels can rival The Bird's Nest.

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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars All Four in One, August 31, 2006
Shirley Jackson is perhaps best known for her works of short fiction that manage to weave a mysterious and disturbing spell upon the readers. The writing encompassed in her early novels is no different. "The Bird's Nest" follows the trail of a young girl whose personality splits into four separate and distinct personalities, a process that readers are able to see from various viewpoints throughout the course of the novel.

Elizabeth Richmond, a 23-year-old museum employee, leads a quiet life. Both of her parents are deceased and she lives with her Aunt Morgen, both of them made comfortable by Elizabeth's inheritance. When Elizabeth keeps experiencing headaches and begins exhibiting abnormal behaviors, she is sent to Dr. Wright. It is while she is under his care that Dr. Wright diagnoses that Elizabeth is suffering from a multiple personality disorder and together they discover the four distinct personalities that reside within her; Elizabeth, Beth, Betsy, and Bess. It is Dr. Wright's job to try to discover the source of Elizabeth's break with reality while battling the two strongest personalities determined to take over completely; for while these two personalities try to destroy the other, they only wind up hurting themselves. It is only when Dr. Wright and Aunt Morgen join forces that Elizabeth is able to make a breakthrough and fight back to become a whole person instead of a fractured one.

This may sound somewhat confusing, but because Jackson offers readers insight into not only Elizabeth's mind, but into that of her doctor and aunt, the storyline progresses at a quick pace. Because the personalities are named, there is an easier track to follow than in Jackson's similarly themed novel "Hangsaman". "The Bird's Nest" is based upon an actual case of multiple personality disorder and Shirley Jackson emdows her narrative with her characteristic mood of dis-ease that turns a confusing nest of characters into a compelling examination of the workings of the inner mind.
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