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The House Where it Happened
Q1 2018: QIR The House Where It
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Colleen
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Jan 27, 2018 07:23AM

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1.The story is told though the perspective of Ellen, a female servant.
Why do you think the author choose Ellen or do you think it would have made a better story if told though another viewpoint ?



Land ownership
Memory
Superstition and legend

1.The story is told though the perspective of Ellen, a female servant.
Why do you think the author choose Ellen or..."
I think that Ellen was chosen as she was a link between the classes on Islandmagee. She had a perfect vantage point to see all htat was happening in the house. I don't think the story would have been as effective if it was someone else who told the story.

OK, this is a hard one! I don't think it is a traditional haunted house narrative but I haven't really read many 'haunted house' books! House of Leaves and The Woman in Black would be my reference points for this question and neither of them are very traditional!

Yes, I think that it being based on true events makes me more intrigued by the story. I find myself wondering what happened to some of the real characters after the story ends, although the author's notes at the back of the book dies give you some idea.

I think the author uses the character of Hamilton Lock as a lynchpin which the events can revolve. He is a useful 'boogeyman' to blame for the events that occur.

I think Mary Dunbar likes the attention she receives when she is having her 'hauntings' and when she is making accusations. She has everybody looking after her and hanging on her every word - why wouldn't she continue?

I don't know if the dialect really had much influence on the story for me, except that it definitely kept in my mind that there were simple folk and more educated people.

I think that in many cases it has been a woman accusing other women of witchcraft. It happened in England (I believe - I saw it in a programme about Great British Castles, I think it was Leicester Castle) and in Salem also. Women of that time seem to me to have been jealous of each other. Perhaps it is the same now, just less accusations of witchcraft!

It was mainly all told from the point of view of the Ulster-Scots as we don't learn until late in the book that Ellen is actually from native Irish heritage. The Church of Ireland minister who comes to Islandmagee at one stage does seem to be more sceptical than the local Presbytherian minister about Mary Dunbar's haunting. He would more than likely have come from the Anglo-Irish gentry and would possibly have been more educated than the local man.
Books mentioned in this topic
House of Leaves (other topics)The Woman in Black (other topics)