Elizabeth Bowen's addiction language devil lover Elizabeth Bowman reproduces popular folktales among her short stories "Devil's Sweetheart". The title indicates that the conspiracy includes a woman facing a past devil lover. Bowen did not deviate from this initial story. Bowen's essay is not ingenious, but depends on the use of subtle things to keep the story interesting. The subtle part of this story gives us questions to attract our interests. Bowen immediately began to feel uneasy in the first paragraph.
"DAEMON LOVER, THE" Shirley Jackson (1949) In "The Daemon Lover", handsome author James (Jamie) Harris abandoned a 34-year-old fiancee. The intrigue of this short story may be influenced by Elizabeth Bowen's "Demon Lovers" named K ATHERINE A NNE PORTER as one of the best short story writers of the day. When Jamie Harris disappeared, he crushed his bride's dream of living in "Country's Golden House" (DL 12). She is confident that she will never change to a house that loves an apartment in a lonely city, reflecting the last scene of "LOTTERY" and "The Pillar of Salt" and many other enclosed women I will. The story of the last fatal injury. In the second story of the blowing "lottery and other stories" Jackson gathered 25 stories, and the reader said James Harris wears a blue suit and his eyes I saw a woman wearing a tall man. I can not really argue that everyone in the reader and the story saw him.
Facts about companions of American short story document, 2nd edition (literary series companion)
To Jackson. In the posts of "Devil's Sweetheart", Bowen says that: "A devil's lover is an organic whole: not just a collection, in a sense, in a sense - whether it is good or bad - a book In addition, the order of the story - through the story - according to the order in which they are placed - I found an upward trend of the illusion The illusion in the story is not dangerous It is not the psychological danger of the story research fantasy A way to complete yourself - (± 1 - 2). For a more comprehensive research on devil lovers' subjects in English literature, see Reed Please refer to.