Horror Aficionados discussion

This topic is about
We Have Always Lived in the Castle
Group Reads
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February 2014 Group Read: We Have Always Lived in the Castle


We can read it over the first week or so and then have nothing to discuss for the rest of February. Or we take a chance and read it at the end of February and hope that no one posts any blatant spoilers. Decisions, decisions.
I remember when reading used to be fun. :-)



Mike wrote: "A good choice. It poses a bit of a dilemma, though since, at 160 pages of story, that's just over 5 pages per day. I don't have that kind of self-control. Soooo...
We can read it over the first week or so and then have nothing to discuss for the rest of February. Or we take a chance and read it at the end of February and hope that no one posts any blatant spoilers. Decisions, decisions."
I was wondering about this, actually. This is my first time doing a group read so I don't know how the pacing/discussion aspect actually works? At any rate, I won't be picking up my copy from the library until the third.
We can read it over the first week or so and then have nothing to discuss for the rest of February. Or we take a chance and read it at the end of February and hope that no one posts any blatant spoilers. Decisions, decisions."
I was wondering about this, actually. This is my first time doing a group read so I don't know how the pacing/discussion aspect actually works? At any rate, I won't be picking up my copy from the library until the third.


Read at your own pace and any specific comments/discussion need to be tagged as spoiler so as not to ruin the story for others.


This just has to be the Most Dysfunctional family. So this is American Goth.

Dizzybea wrote: "[...] Unfortunately, I realized too late that the introduction to the book contained spoilers. I'd probably have like it more if I hadn't known certain things."
Oh no! Thanks for letting the rest of us know. I usually don't read introductions until after I read the book, unless they're written by the author, to avoid that very thing.
Oh no! Thanks for letting the rest of us know. I usually don't read introductions until after I read the book, unless they're written by the author, to avoid that very thing.



Fantastic writing that really got inside my head but not scary.


There are many mainstream novels that contain unsettling elements, elements of terror or horror, possibly even some overt supernatural elements, but which wouldn't be called 'horror stories'. Obvious examples include The Witches of Eastwick, Heart of Darkness, A Christmas Carol.
I'll happily read most of those novels, perhaps I'm even drawn by the elements of the supernatural or other horror, but I wuldn't consider most of them to be 'horror' novels.
It's hard to create a cast-iron definition of horror without resorting to 'I know it when I see it' positions.
I suppose it's all a big venn diagram with the different genres overlapping left, right and centre. I tend towards the centre of the core horror circle.
Mike wrote: "Aric, where does the oozing boundary between mainstream and horror lie, though?"
I'm still reading We Have Always Lived in the Castle so I can't contribute to the discussion about that book in particular (yet), but I think that one way to make the distinction between a horror novel and a novel that merely has horror elements is "Does the horror element turn the plot?"
I'm still reading We Have Always Lived in the Castle so I can't contribute to the discussion about that book in particular (yet), but I think that one way to make the distinction between a horror novel and a novel that merely has horror elements is "Does the horror element turn the plot?"

Meranda~ does the horror element turn the plot? I agree with your statement, if it does turn the plot, it is most definitely horror. It will be interesting to see if 'I Have Always Lived in the Castle' applies.



The question of genre: I've seen We Have Always Lived in the Castle called psychological horror, and it was reviewed as part of a book of horror stories (http://www.isfdb.org/cgi-bin/pl.cgi?7...). It seemed to me to have many characteristics of a "gothic."
I did like the book. I have some questions for discussion that I'll post when I have more time.
I did like the book. I have some questions for discussion that I'll post when I have more time.

Is WHALITC gothic in feel but not by definition, perhaps?

I actually would classify it as a horror novel. I'm not sure it fits easily into any category, but that's the one that comes the closest, IMHO.
(view spoiler)



I probably missed something - sometimes when I get into a book I skim a little bit.


Am I the only one who feels this way?
Alice Sebold begins Lovely Bones like that, but then again the narrator also tells us right away that she's dead. Maybe even more haunting, though, is Marilynne Robinson's Housekeeping, which isn't even a horror novel--but one of the more haunting books I've read, nonetheless.
Does anyone know if Shirley Jackson was the first to open a novel this way? (Other than Melville in Moby Dick, which is totally different, I think.)

I'm really curious about how you think this parallels The Lottery.

I'm really curious about how you think this parallels The Lottery."
Hi Bailey! The culmination of the horror where the townspeople start throwing rocks through the windows of the already burned house (same as 'The Lottery'), and cluster around the two women in a mob mentality struck me as identical to her story. No, the townspeople didn't pick a name out of a lottery, but to me they seemed to have chosen right from the beginning...just without the lottery aspect. I have read all of Jackson's work, and so far her collection of stories 'Come Along with Me' is the best, though many of the stories there are not of the suspense/thriller/mystery element. I still found the book very enjoyable, and the parallel did not ruin the novel for me in any way.

Hey, Aric. Great explanation! Thanks! I think you're totally right. Shirley Jackson really had a thing for mob violence, didn't she?
The thing about The Lottery, though, was that the townspeople were willing to kill anyone just because tradition and superstition said so. From what I remember after reading it last year, I thought the story was kind of a warning against the human capacity to act reflexively and violently in the name of a perceived greater good. Sort of a modern inversion of Abraham and Isaac. (The lesson may be a little, well, obvious, but Shirley Jackson was writing like right after the holocaust, so I guess we can give her a pass on heavy-handedness when it comes to complacency in the face of murderous authority.)
(view spoiler)
Considering the loads of hate mail Shirley Jackson got after publishing The Lottery, and also considering that We Have Always Lived in the Castle takes place in what is ostensibly Bennington, where she lived, I wonder if maybe the story was kind of an exploration of her own personal fears? An agoraphobic's Gothic nightmare? What do you think?

I like your idea of an agoraphobic's Gothic nightmare, which I had not applied to the story before you brought it up.

Discuss and enjoy~