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SHIRLEY JACKSON'S "THE LOTTERY" by Shirley Jackson Kirkus Star

SHIRLEY JACKSON'S "THE LOTTERY"

A Graphic Adaptation

by Shirley Jackson adapted by Miles Hyman illustrated by Miles Hyman

Pub Date: Oct. 11th, 2016
ISBN: 978-0-8090-6650-6
Publisher: Hill and Wang/Farrar, Straus and Giroux

A stunning graphic adaptation of a chilling classic.

Hyman, grandson of Shirley Jackson, original author of “The Lottery,” offers his interpretation of her iconic story. In it, townspeople gather to partake in a disturbing tradition—the origins of and reasons for which we are not told. There is mention of bigger towns, where the lottery takes two days, and talk of other, radical towns where the lottery has been eliminated altogether. To follow their lead would mean regressing to living in caves and “eating stewed chickweed and acorns.” Each head of family must draw from an heirloom box a slip of paper. He who draws the slip with the black, circular mark is chosen; his family must draw again. The member of his family who draws the marked slip will be stoned, presumably to death, by the rest of the town, including the remaining family members. Hyman’s illustrations are powerful: rich and evocative graphic realism, softly colored, marrying Rockwell-ian and American Gothic style. The tone, at first, is both ominous and mundane. As the townspeople gather in the June sun, they banter with familiar ease—“Wouldn’t have me leave m’dishes in the sink, now, would you, Joe?”—but beneath the banal, the mood is decidedly baleful. When the black spot is drawn, the mood, along with the color scheme, shifts dramatically: both are immediately drained of the bucolic and sonorous. The rest of the story is starkly depicted in black, white, and harvest orange. The most unnerving illustration depicts a small boy taking up a fistful of child-sized rocks to aim at his pleading mother.

A haunting story of humanity’s herd mentality, brilliantly rendered.