It's that scene into kill a mockingbird where it's scout like individually names a racist who's gonna lynch Tom Robinson or whatever and he's like aw shucks I guess I can't do it kid knows my name. stuff we're sorry about their eat the rich campaign that just destroyed this home. And then do they the the girls recover do they just like go on and live in their ruined house? The roof of it is kind of open to the elements so you don't as somebody who's dealt a lot with like water ingress in my in my current home know how not meant to keep water out of it. It feels fine because it was they they were safely enscon
Shirley Jackson's We Have Always Lived In The Castle shares some qualities with her best-known short story The Lottery; both feature small New England towns that are the site of some unfortunate mob action. Join us for a conversation about non-supernatural creepiness, unreliable narrators, and early flights.
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