A young family tumbles from a city apartment into the Vermont countryside, armed with two children, five thousand books, and a belief that domestic life can be civilized by shelving. Their new home, the Fielding house, greets them like a retired aristocrat, peeling and dignified, haunted by doughnuts left by previous tenants. The husband bargains with a landlord whose conscience sleeps as deeply as the plumbing, and the wife narrates her trials with the tone of a philosopher cleaning under the crib.
They unpack into a world where furniture claims its own spots, attics latch themselves, and bats test the family’s faith in civilization. The old pillars at the front serve as the sentries of their accidental kingdom, and the countryside accepts them with the indulgence reserved for fools who mean well.
The house swells with voices and clutter. Laurie grows from a three-year-old menace into a boy who returns from kindergarten fluent in mischief and grammar both. He speaks of a mysterious Charles, a classroom anarchist who slaps teachers, mocks authority, and commands attention. Parental concern rises like dough, only to collapse in the revelation that Charles lives entirely inside Laurie’s imagination.
Jannie, the younger child, follows her brother’s path through innocence toward conspiracy, while the parents juggle small wars over shoes, milk, and grammar. Their lives pivot between the absurd and the affectionate: a rat hunt turns into an exercise in farce, an air gun defeats a window instead of vermin, and the family cat becomes the true hunter in residence.
Across years and seasons, the household evolves into a theater of continuity. The father declares wars he cannot finish; the mother makes peace through pie crusts that resist cooperation; the children advance through birthdays like soldiers through campaigns. Schoolyard duels, phone feuds, and misplaced heroics merge into a pattern of endurance.
The Vermont community observes with polite fascination, amused by these urban settlers who treat domestic disorder as an art form. By the book's end, the family stands firm within their noisy empire, surrounded by ghosts, cats, and crumbs, while the pillars of the Fielding house bear witness to their cheerful surrender to domestic eternity.
Shirley Jackson pretends to write about domestic life, but what she really writes about is survival in a small-scale madhouse with table settings. Her family flees the city for Vermont, chasing a fantasy of quiet country living that collapses under the weight of laundry, plumbing, and children who behave like experimental art projects.
Jackson, a mother with a genius for understatement, endures eviction, house-hunting, childbirth, and schoolyard politics with the fatal calm of someone who knows that resistance is pointless. Every one of her sentences glitters with the comedy of endurance. The husband, a scholar with the soul of an absent plumber, handles crises through theory, while the wife handles them through sarcasm and sweeping. Every domestic emergency charmingly turns into slapstick.
Jackson’s theme hides inside the comedy. Family life, she suggests, operates as a form of collective insanity that society calls stability. Love expresses itself through perseverance, and chaos turns into routine through sheer repetition. Every household becomes its own haunted house, filled with voices, history, and objects that develop grudges.
Jackson built her world out of things most writers overlook: the PTA meeting that feels like a trial by fire, the neighbor who knows your income before your name, the house that creaks like it disapproves of you. Her humor sneaks up on you, never jokey, always aware that the ridiculous is the truest part of daily life. Her rural world operates on gossip, weather, and quiet hysteria, the native elements of any small town.
The beauty comes from the rhythm of her sentences, which move like conversation between intelligence and exhaustion. She turns the act of boiling coffee or searching for socks into anthropology, and she treats domestic chaos with the same gravity a war correspondent gives to battlefields.
Beneath the laughter hides something elegant: the idea that ordinary life contains grandeur when described honestly. Her humor feels subversive even now, because Jackson presents motherhood as both devotion and delirium. Civilization begins at home, and home is the place where civilization constantly breaks.
I give it the full five 💫💫💫💫💫