Shirley Jackson was one of Americas most prominent female writers of the 1950s. Between 1948 and 1965 she published six novels, one best-selling story collection, two popular volumes of her family chronicles and many stories, which ranged from fairly conventional tales for the womens magazine market to the ambiguous, allusive, delicately sinister and more obviously literary stories that were closest to Jacksons heart and destined to end up in the more highbrow end of the market. Most critical discussions of Jackson tend to focus on The Lottery and The Haunting of Hill House. An author of such accomplishmentand one so fully engaged with the pressures and preoccupations of postwar Americamerits fuller discussion. To that end, this collection of essays widens the scope of Jackson scholarship with new writing on such works as The Road through the Wall and We Have Always Lived in the Castle, and topics ranging from Jacksons domestic fiction to ethics, cosmology, and eschatology. The book also makes newly available some of the most significant Jackson scholarship published in the last two decades.


