Showing posts with label rape. Show all posts
Showing posts with label rape. Show all posts

Monday, December 12, 2011

The New Yorker: "Stone Mattress" by Margaret Atwood


December 19 & 26, 2011: “Stone Mattress” by Margaret Atwood

The New Yorker’s Holiday Present to you—a story (and quite a good one, at that) that isn’t behind the paywall. This story reminds me somewhat of the Alice Munro story, “Axis,” from earlier in the year, since it involves the passage of a long time after youthful sex, and also deals with a geological formation that plays at least a symbolic role in the story.

Here, sixty-something Verna is on an Arctic cruise, thinking of getting back in the game after taking some time off following the death of her fourth husband. She’s calculating and smart, and she knows she’s better staying away from the married men. But she notices one, a “Bob,” and makes her approach. 

Although he doesn’t remember her, she remembers him quite well—he raped her some 50 years earlier when she was 14. She’d been a sheltered girl up until that point, but she became pregnant, had to give the child up, and never recovered. She begins to plot her revenge . . .

Don’t read the Q&A with Margaret Atwood until you’ve read the story, but be sure and read it. There isn’t much more to say about it beyond what Atwood says. And I won’t discuss it further to avoid spoilers. (Usually in New Yorker stories that doesn’t matter much, but it does in this one.)