This Little Black Classic turned out to be quite a surprise!
When I bought this book, I thought I was going to read feminist stories. What I actually got, were feminist psychological horror stories. Bundled in this little book are 3 of the 200 short-stories that Charlotte Perkins Gilman wrote, and among them is her most famous one, "The Yellow Wallpaper".
This story blew me away. The mood and the setting is completely different from the other 'Victorian' stories that I've read this year. No sweet romance or tea-parties: in this story a young woman/mother falls prey to her under-stimulation and isolation, and slowly becomes obsessed with the yellow wallpaper in her room. Her husband thinks that locking her up is thé remedy to cure her 'wild emotions', but the opposite happens.
Gilman describes the woman's thoughts and the wallpaper itself in great detail, so that you as a reader quickly empathize with her. This gets frightening when the woman gets her mental-breakdown over the wallpaper, because you almost want to do the same: cracking the mystery of the wallpaper is the only way to free your mind(s).
The other short-stories, "The Rocking Chair" and "Old Water" get less under your skin as the first one, but share the theme of obsession. In the second story two men becomes fascinated by the pretty young girl that sits in the old rocking chair in their guest-house, and in the third an old Poet finds himself head-over-heels with an uneducated woman.
Another recuring theme is these stories are dangerous men/husbands. In all the stories the women play a large rol, but it are the men who make the bad decisions, who act like modern 'Nice Guys' and are creepy, arrogant, and cause doom.
This LBC convinced me of Charlotte's talent and I will definitely look up more short-stories of her. My only two comments are that "Old Water" didn't really fit with the other two stories - it was more hilarious than scary -, and there was no haunting atmosphere during "The Rocking Chair", so the mystery in the story felt pretty boring. It would have been better if another, stronger story of Gilman had been used for this collection.
However, I will definitely recommend this book to my friends, because it's a great introduction to this quick-witted and critical writer.
3.5/4 stars.