shirley jackson
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Alfred Hitchcock presents Stories My Mother Never Told Me: Part One (Pan 1964). From a charity shop in Nottingham. Anthology of stories featuring Ray Bradbury, Roald Dahl, F. Scott Fitzgerald, Shirley Jackson, Richard Matheson and more. From the Introduc
The Cold Embrace, edited by Alex Hamilton. Stories of the macabre by Elizabeth Bowen, Agatha Christie, Margaret Irwin, Elizabeth Jane Howard, Shirley Jackson and more. (Corgi, 1966)From a second-hand bookshop in Bournemouth.
The Lottery: Adventures of the Daemon Lover, by Shirley Jackson (Bard Books, 1969).From The Last Bookstore in Los Angeles.
vintageblack2: Dr. Shirley Ann Jackson, the first black woman to earn a doctorate from Massachusetts Institute of Technology in nuclear physics. R.E.S.P.E.C.T
caitlynhetillica: Eight Scary Novels The Shining by Stephen King Haunted: A Novel in Stories by Chuck Palahniuk The Haunting of Hill House by Shirley Jackson The Turn of the Screw by Henry James The King in Yellow by Robert W. Chambers The Call of
babybearest: “It’s spring, you’re young, you’re lovely, you have a right to be happy. Come back into the world.” — Shirley Jackson, We Have Always Lived in the Castle (via luthienne)
everythingsecondhand: The Cold Embrace, edited by Alex Hamilton. Stories of the macabre by Elizabeth Bowen, Agatha Christie, Margaret Irwin, Elizabeth Jane Howard, Shirley Jackson and more. (Corgi, 1966) From a second-hand bookshop in Bournemouth.
everythingsecondhand: The Lottery: Adventures of the Daemon Lover, by Shirley Jackson (Bard Books, 1969). From The Last Bookstore in Los Angeles.
The Haunting Of Hill House, by Shirley Jackson (Four Square, 1963).From ebay.
everythingsecondhand:The Haunting Of Hill House, by Shirley Jackson (Four Square, 1963).From ebay.
gobookyourself: Miss Peregrine’s Home for Peculiar Children by Ransom Riggs For more creepy stories and creative storytelling… We Have Always Lived in the Castle by Shirley Jackson for a perfectly formed and utterly chilling story of family secrets.
the poet's sleep
oiseauperdu: “On the moon we spoke a soft, liquid tongue, and sang in the starlight, looking down on the dead dried world.” — Shirley Jackson, We Have Always Lived in the Castle
sheer delight and gratitude;
baredmirror: “Her stories take place in small towns, in kitchens, at cocktail parties. Her characters are trapped by the petty prejudices of people who make themselves feel good by thinking they are somehow better than us all. They live in houses that
windflowerfairy: Shirley Jackson, from The Haunting of Hill House
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moodyinapinkbow: Moodboard: We Have Always Lived In The Castle. “I remember that I stood on the library steps holding my books and looking for a minute at the soft hinted green in the branches against the sky and wishing, as I always did, that I could
antigonick: “The gap between the poetry she wrote and the poetry she contained was, for Natalie, something unsolvable.” — Shirley Jackson, Hangsaman
antigonick: “—walking silently among the trees, aware of their terrifying silence, so much more expectant by night, and their great unbent heads, and the darkness they pulled about her with silent hands.” — Shirley Jackson, Hangsaman
olreid:ALTshirley jackson, we have always lived in the castle
coweyed: William Teason’s covers for Shirley Jackson’s books.
unrestrainedbrain: Shirley Jackson and the Terrible, Horrible, No Good, Very Bad Cold
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magrittee: Cover for Shirley Jackson’s We Have Always Lived in the Castle (1963) artwork by William Teason
Misguided Ghosts
The KillBot Factory
Wildflower In A Zephyr
The final sentence.
very splendid and worthwhile
For the Gothic Heroine
Susan Hated Even More Stuff
antigonick: “I am living on the moon, I told myself, I have a little house all by myself on the moon.” — Shirley Jackson, We Have Always Lived in the Castle
VOLCANO BLOOD
yan-wo:We Have Always Lived in a Castle cover (detail) - William Teason
cinemaspam:We Have Always Lived in the Castle (2018) dir. Stacie Passon
missinggirltrope: The Tooth by Shirley Jackson
virgomoon:home is the first gravePSYCHOGEOGRAPHY - CHELSEA DINGMAN // ‘AFTER EFFECTS’ - DANIELE DEL NERO // THE HAUNTING OF HILL HOUSE - SHIRLEY JACKSON // CORALINE (2009) - DIR. HENRY SELICK // ST. LUCY’S HOME FOR GIRL’S RAISED BY WOLVES
sixpenceee: starry-ponds: for sixpenceee- In 1948, a story called The Lottery was published in the New Yorker by Shirley Jackson. It is about an ordinary town that holds a ritual called The Lottery every year. read it here I read that in high school
stuffmomnevertoldyou: strongfemaleleads: Scientist[Dr. Shirley Ann Jackson, “theoretical physicist and inventor whose research helped to create the portable fax, touch tone telephone, the solar cell, and the fiber optic cables, and the technology
lilymaidofgallifrey: “She has filled the tower with books, and a huge old cat, and she may practice alchemy there, for all anyone knows.” — Shirley Jackson, excerpt of “A Visit”, in The Folio Book of Ghost Stories (via antigonick)
mortisia: The Haunting (1963) A 1963 British psychological horror film directed and produced by Robert Wise and adapted by Nelson Gidding from the novel The Haunting of Hill House by Shirley Jackson. It stars Julie Harris, Claire Bloom, Richard Johnson,
vintageblack2: Dr. Shirley Ann Jackson, the first black woman to earn a doctorate from Massachusetts Institute of Technology in nuclear physics.
Dr. Shirley Jackson
The Lottery by Shirley Jackson
changlingsea: Part of one of my favorite “nursery rhymes” from one of my favorite books, We Have Always Lived in the Castle by Shirley Jackson. I wanted the piece to look very boring from a distance but have a dark secret. It didn’t quite turn
godzilla-reads:So long as you write it away regularly nothing can really hurt you.—Shirley Jackson
violetdino: vintageblack2: Dr. Shirley Ann Jackson, the first black woman to earn a doctorate from Massachusetts Institute of Technology in nuclear physics. Serious fucking badass.
naamahdarling:theliteraryarchitect: lotusohm: Shirley Jackson’s The Haunting of Hill House was published sixty years ago today. The novel begins with one of the best openings I have ever read: “No live organism can continue for long to exist