Shirley Jackson, 1916-1965, one of the most brilliant and influential authors of the twentieth century, is widely acclaimed for her stories and novels of the supernatural, including the well-known short story “The Lottery” and the best-selling novel “The Haunting of Hill House.”
Shirley Jackson was born in San Francisco on December 14, 1916, and spent her childhood in nearby Burlingame, California, where she began writing poetry and short stories as a young teenager. Her family moved East when she was seventeen, and she attended the University of Rochester. After a year, in 1936, she withdrew and spent a year at home practicing writing, producing a minimum of a thousand words a day.
She entered Syracuse University in 1937, where she published her first story, “Janice,” and was soon appointed fiction editor of the campus humor magazine. After winning a poetry contest at Syracuse she met her future husband, young aspiring literary critic Stanley Edgar Hyman, and together they founded a literary magazine, Spectre, with Hyman as editor. Both graduated in 1940 and moved to New York’s Greenwich Village, where Shirley wrote without fail every day while they both worked odd jobs. She began having her stories published in The New Republic and The New Yorker, and the first of their four children was born. In 1944 Jackson’s story “Come Dance With Me in Ireland” was chosen for Best American Short Stories.
In 1945, Stanley Hyman was offered a teaching position at Bennington College, and they moved into an old house in North Bennington, Vermont, where Shirley continued her daily writing while raising children and running a household. Her first novel, The Road Through The Wall, was published in 1948. That same year The New Yorker published Jackson’s iconic story, “The Lottery,” which generated the largest volume of mail ever received by the magazine---before or since---almost all of it hateful. “The Lottery” has since been published in dozens of languages, and is still required reading in U.S. high schools. It is possibly the most well-known short story of the 20th Century. Continue reading from Shirley Jackson Official
Shirley Jackson (Encyclopedia Britannica)
Shirley Jackson (Encyclopedia)
The Hidden History of 18 Indian Hill Road (Dan Woog's 06880)
Shirley Jackson’s 18 Indian Hill Road: The Sequel (Dan Woog's 06880)
My Niece Is Probably the Reincarnation of Shirley Jackson (Lit Hub)
Shirley Jackson: A Chronology and a Supplementary Checklist (JSTOR)
Why Shirley Jackson’s Horror Speaks to our Times (The Guardian)
The Lottery by Shirley Jackson (The New Yorker)
75 Years After ‘The Lottery’ Was Published, the Chills Linger (NY Times)
Listen to the Only Recording of Shirley Jackson’s Voice (Lit Hub)
New 'Shirley' Movie Is Only Part of Her Story (Esquire)
Shirley Jackson (The Village of North Bennington, VT)
Ruth Franklin: Shirley Jackson and the Madness of Mid-Century Womanhood (Guernica Magazine)