Louisa, Please Come by Shirley Jackson
[2023-11-09 00:35:19]
Shirley Jackson's "Louisa, Go Home" is the first person stories about Luisa's experience in the 1950s Rockville town. The protagonists are Louisa Tether, Mr. Peacock, Carroll tether, Misestera, Mister tether, Paul. Mr. Tether and his wife, Mrs. Peacock and Mrs Paul worked together to solve the problem of Louis leaving home. The hero's Louisa Tether is a 19-year-old girl with blond hair, 5 feet 4 inches tall and weighing 126 pounds.
Catherine · Mansfield, Angela · Carter, and now Shirley · Jackson died at the age of 48 in 1965. Jackson's husband released Luisa after her death, please go home. Prior to that, she was well-known for her lottery, the most famous short film in the world. Shirley Jackson 's best novel is distractingly creepy, but the story is interesting, but not terribly suspense. Instead, you will want to know what the hero has to do, maybe you probably wonder if our opinion of the person closest to us is really accurate.
Shirley Jackson's "Louisa, Go Home" is the first person stories about Luisa's experience in the 1950s Rockville town. The protagonists are Louisa Tether, Mr. Peacock, Carroll tether, Misestera, Mister tether, Paul. Mr. Tether and his wife, Mrs. Peacock and Mrs. Paul worked together to solve the problem of Luisa leaving home. Through the story, Shirley Jackson shows Luisa's life and, ultimately, the personality of the character is shining.
This is a snapshot of a young lady who seems to be completely out of touch with humans. Luisa is not fully restricted, it shows that Shirley Jackson gave her a sarcastic surname by her. But apart from that, Luisa is not without a desire. Her psychological need is to leave some space between herself and her family. After three years and the former role, her moral need was after anger, but to reconnect with her family. Interestingly, Jackson told us how Luisa escaped her family, but that did not explain why. The contents left on the page may be more interesting than the explanation. The truth, we do not know why she left. The theme is the king which is totally transmitted in this story, the reader knows the real event rather than the complete psychology behind it. If Jackson tells us why she ran away, Luisa needs to be an emotional talker who can fully understand and know himself and then describe it as text.