>The New Yorker: "Gravel" by Alice Munro

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June 27, 2011: “Gravel” by Alice Munro
But what happened to Blitzee?
As I was reading this wonderful Alice Munro story (available for free, so read it quick before they change their minds!), I wondered why the narrator had such a poor memory of this period of her life. She was five, true, but still. And then the facts are revealed. How her holder Caro sister had acted out already—a protest, in a sense, over the destruction of the family—and so Caro’s behavior on the day in question was not a huge surprise.
The girls’ mother fancies herself a Bohemian, hangs out with actors at the local summer theater, and eventually leaves their father for Neal, who, she says, has made her pregnant. Even though it’s the mother who has caused the problem, she retains custody and takes the girls to a trailer to live with Neal. It’s out in the country and has various dangers, but the mother isn’t a very attentive caretaker. Which is not to say she doesn’t love the girls. She does, and she watches out for them. Until one day . . .
But what happened exactly. She doesn’t remember. I don’t blame her.
A very good story.

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Comments

  1. >I was going to go back and see if I missed what happened to the dog, too. I guess I didn't! No matter, the story was flawless and gorgeous. The memory issue handled perfectly the guilt and irrevocability of the circumstances.

  2. Children react to parental separation in strange ways. Caro had no one to confide too about how she was feeling but acted out to draw attention to her plight. Maybe she did not want to die or maybe she did, we will never know. How helpless children may feel in such a predicament.

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