Showing posts with label women's magazines. Show all posts
Showing posts with label women's magazines. Show all posts

Wednesday, May 3, 2023

Short Story Wednesday: Wilma Shore: WW2 stories in McCALL'S: "You Can't Tell Your Mother", "A Woman in Love", "Something of Her Own"

Wilma Shore as a writer has been of continuing interest to me, and the recent citations in the FictionMags Index which included links to the full texts of McCall's magazine, in the Internet Archive, made for a rather good couple of hours' reading. She didn't collect any of these three stories in her one book of fiction, Women Should Be Allowed, but they are nearly as good as those that are, particularly the last of them. I have to wonder if she sent her stories to the Ladies' Home Journal first, on her market list of women's magazines, and if the possible title change of her first story for McCall's (as it would make a bit more sense if titled "You Can't Tell My Mother") or some more conservative tilt in the magazine made it less-favored by Shore for her best work in this wise.


"You Can't Tell Your Mother" is the first and slightest of these three, dating from the May 1942 issue of McCall's, just far enough into US direct combat in the war for a bulletin elsewhere in the issue about how rayon stockings are Almost as good as nylon or silk, but special care must be taken with them. It's a mostly charming, if sad, story about a young girl (a bright 8yo), who confesses to one of her mother's coworkers her own terror of Uboats/submarines generally, as well as other war-driven fear, and how she doesn't dare share these with her mother, despite the protagonist encouraging her to do so, for fear of burdening her mother unduly...which gets the childless protagonist thinking about how very terribly complex as well as terrifying the current crises can only seem to all of us.  I suppose, if the title is Shore's, it was meant to suggest that the girl would advise us thus, but I suspect Shore might've found a more deft way of doing so. 


"A Woman in Love" (from the April 1943 issue) is a much longer and more complex story, focused on the relationship between a married couple of their early middle years, and how they are drawn into direct participation in the war effort, and the stresses this (and external stresses from coping with the demands of wartime activity more generally) places on their relations...told from the wife's point of view, the story is somewhat less thoroughly supportive of her somewhat cooling response to how her husband begins to disappoint her, for the first time in their marriage, in his less than self-sacrificing commitment...without damning her or him from Shore's perspective. But I think Shore wanted us to be a bit disappointed in her for the nature of her disappointment in him. 

While the best of the three is her last in McCall's (ever, as far as the FictionMags Index, or FMI, is aware), from the March 1944 issue, "Something of Her Own", a rather fully-realized account of the somewhat confusing cautious slide into a romantic relationship between two somewhat unconventional young professionals, she working as a stenographer, he as a slightly dissatisfied but obligated junior corporate lawyer, and both always not quite sure of what they genuinely want from life, and never fully at ease with the choices they make or have thrust upon them. It rather expertly deals directly with the complex of emotions wartime separation inflicts on couples, along with the other matters of family, worklife and other pressures that most of us have faced to one degree or another in this country (and most if not all others, in somewhat differing ways) over the last century. 

These are sensitively-written stories, with relatively little if any Forced Uplift (much less Happily Ever After/For Now strictures that are placed on most romance fiction over the decades), and interesting to see in the context of even the sober times they were published in, in a magazine that wasn't (perhaps correctly, but not completely correctly) seen as fully advancing the cause of women as whole persons...but particularly in those days, when they were interested in Wilma Shore contributions, along with those from a relatively few people whose names might strike similar faint bells (such as Rachel Field or Faith Baldwin), doing what they and the magazine staffs (and it's notable how many of the executive editors were men in this decade, and for the next couple of decades at least) felt they could to provide various sorts of service to their readers. (Shore on the new sobriety of the women's magazines and other "slicks" as World War 2 ground on.) 

From the FMI:

For more of today's short stories, please see Patti Abbott's blog.

Friday, March 7, 2014

FFM: McSWEENEY'S 45: HITCHCOCK AND BRADBURY FISTFIGHT IN HEAVEN (2013); THE PARIS REVIEW 145, Winter 1997; LADIES HOME JOURNAL, August 1964

Three magazine issues, this time...one from last year, one 17 years old and almost of legal majority, one essentially as old as I am, approaching a half-century. 

McSweeney's Quarterly Concern is the protean magazine edited and published by Dave Eggers, whom I've recently described here thus: Dave Eggers, the author of a precious and highly popular memoir of taking care of his younger brother, A Heartbreaking Work of Staggering Genius, itself by title alone indicative of Eggers's tendency toward the desire to do (genuinely) good work (often in the sense of charitable, though he clearly strives artistically) in various directions and to simultaneously congratulate himself for doing so in the most smugly adorable manner. 


Everything that's good and bad about McSweeney's is embodied in this issue, which, happily, still results in a pretty good reading experience for those who might be only somewhat misled by the laziness of thought of Eggers and staff, following on a whimsical notion of the boss. Eggers had finally gotten around to reading Alfred Hitchcock Presents: Stories Not for the Nervous edited by Robert Arthur (Random House, 1965) and Timeless Stories for Today and Tomorrow edited by Ray Bradbury (Bantam, 1952), and decided that it would be kewl to, not so much reprint either book (the Hitchcock-branded book hasn't seen a new reprint of the two Dell paperbacks taken from it since about 1973, I'm not sure when the last Bantam Pathfinder YA reprint of the Bradbury was offered), but to take selected stories from each volume and cast them in a sort of competition between the two "editors" (Eggers and his staff couldn't be bothered to learn that Hitchcock essentially never edited a book, and certainly not any in the "AH Presents:" series; in his editorial introduction he also manages to completely conflate the best-of collections from Alfred Hitchcock's Mystery Magazine, which AH also never edited, with the "AH Presents" and other anthologies branded with Hitchcock's name, most of those edited by Robert Arthur before the latter's death in 1969)...mixed with four new stories Eggers thinks are compatible with his gleanings (and a cover image and title inspired by Sherman Alexie's first collection of short stories, for which Eggers was careful to ask permission...social obligations trumping scholarly ones, doncha know).


courtesy Kinokuniya.com...As Bradbury didn't, either, no mention is made of C.L. Moore's contribution to the Kuttner story, and of course Eggers is blissfully ignorant of the ghosted status of introduction reprinted as by Alfred Hitchcock (the numbers in parentheses are the length of the item in pages):
Table of Contents
 
Letters From Cory Doctorow, Jamie Quatro,          6  (13)
Benjamin Percy, and Anthony Marra
Introduction                                       19 (6)
          Ray Bradbury
    A Brief Message from our Sponsor               25 (2)
          Alfred Hitchcock
    The Sound Machine                              27 (16)
          Roald Dahl
    Night Flight                                   43 (8)
          Josephine W. Johnson
    Dune Roller                                    51 (48)
          Julian May
    The Design                                     99 (30)
          China Mieville
    The Laocoon Complex                            129(14)
          J.C. Furnas
    The Pedestrian                                 143(6)
          Ray Bradbury
    Wrong Number                                   149(94)
          Lucille Fletcher
          Allan Ullman Sorry
    The Dust                                       243(46)
          Brian Evenson
    The Enormous Radio                             289(14)
          John Cheever
    Saint Katy the Virgin                          303(10)
          John Steinbeck
    For All the Rude People                        313(16)
          Jack Ritchie
    Suicide Woods                                  329(10)
          Benjamin Percy
    In the Penal Colony                            339(30)
          Franz Kafka
    The Pilgrim and the Angel                      369(12)
          E. Lily Yu
    Housing Problem                                381(18)
          Henry Kuttner
    None Before Me                                 399(36)
          Sidney Carroll
    Don't Look Behind You                          435
          Fredric Brown
The four new stories are the Yu, Evenson, Mieville and Percy contributions, and I've yet to read them, but their presence is indicative of some sense of whom to go to for the kind of elegant fantasticated and crime fiction otherwise represented here, even if Eggers can't get out of his own way in his brief editorial ("Who knew Cheever could write speculative fiction?" Anyone who's read Cheever, probably, and certainly "The Enormous Radio" is not one of his more obscure stories). Except for the new stories, and the cover if you must, you might do better emulating Eggers's own example and picking up used copies of the two anthologies for considerably less than the $24 the magazine issue goes for, as nicely produced a "quality" paperback as it is, given that Eggers is not the editor that Arthur or Bradbury were. Though I will give Eggers this...I've yet to get around to the Bradbury book myself, since I'd read about half the contents elsewhere by the time I'd become aware of it, and am glad he was able to find and share some of the joy of Robert Arthur's editorial work as an adult, even if resolutely doesn't credit it. 


the Contento indices:
Alfred Hitchcock Presents: Stories Not for the Nervous [ghost edited by Robert Arthur] ed. Alfred Hitchcock (Random House LCC# 65-21262, 1965, $5.95, 363pp, hc); Derivative Anthologies: Alfred Hitchcock Presents: Stories Not for the Nervous (Dell 1966) and Alfred Hitchcock Presents: More Stories Not for the Nervous.
Dell pb, Vol. 1 of 2
  • ix · A Brief Message from Our Sponsor · Alfred Hitchcock · in
  • 3 · To the Future · Ray Bradbury · ss Colliers May 13 ’50
  • 18 · River of Riches · Gerald Kersh · ss The Saturday Evening Post Mar 8 ’58
  • 31 · Levitation · Joseph Payne Brennan · ss Nine Horrors and a Dream, Arkham, 1958
  • 36 · Miss Winters and the Wind · Christine N. Govan · ss Tomorrow May ’46
  • 42 · View from the Terrace · Mike Marmer · ss Cosmopolitan Dec ’60
  • 53 · The Man with Copper Fingers [“The Abominable History of the Man with Copper Fingers”; Lord Peter Wimsey] · Dorothy L. Sayers · ss Lord Peter Views the Body, London: Gollancz, 1928
  • 72 · The Twenty Friends of William Shaw · Raymond E. Banks · ss Mike Shayne Mystery Magazine Mar ’60
  • 81 · The Other Hangman · Carter Dickson · ss A Century of Detective Stories, ed. Anon., London: Hutchinson, 1935
  • 95 · Don’t Look Behind You · Fredric Brown · ss EQMM May ’47
  • 107 · No Bath for the Browns · Margot Bennett · ss Lilliput Nov ’45
  • 111 · The Uninvited [“A Prince of Abyssinia”; Daniel John CalderSamuel Behrens] · Michael Gilbert · ss Argosy (UK) Mar ’62
  • 122 · Dune Roller · Julian May · nv Astounding Dec ’51
  • 163 · Something Short of Murder [as by O. H. Leslie] · Henry Slesar · ss AHMM Nov ’57
  • 177 · The Golden Girl · Ellis Peters · ss This Week Aug 16 ’64
  • 182 · The Boy Who Predicted Earthquakes · Margaret St. Clair · ss Maclean’s, 1950
  • 192 · Walking Alone · Miriam Allen deFord · ss EQMM Oct ’57
  • 206 · For All the Rude People · Jack Ritchie · ss AHMM Jun ’61
  • 220 · The Dog Died First · Bruno Fischer · nv Mystery Book Magazine Fll ’49
  • 242 · Room with a View · Hal Dresner · ss AHMM Jul ’62
  • 252 · Lemmings · Richard Matheson · vi F&SF Jan ’58
  • 255 · White Goddess · Idris Seabright (Margaret St. Clair) · ss F&SF Jul ’56
  • 261 · The Substance of Martyrs · William Sambrot · ss Rogue Dec ’63
  • 269 · Call for Help · Robert Arthur · ss Mike Shayne Mystery Magazine Apr ’64
  • 285 · Sorry, Wrong Number · Lucille Fletcher & Allan Ullman · n. New York: Random House, 1948
Timeless Stories for Today and Tomorrow ed. Ray Bradbury (Bantam A944, Sep ’52, 35¢, 306pp, pb)
  • vii · Introduction · Ray Bradbury · in
  • 1 · The Hour After Westerly · Robert M. Coates · ss New Yorker Nov 1 ’47
  • 15 · Housing Problem · Henry Kuttner · ss Charm Oct ’44
  • 33 · The Portable Phonograph · Walter Van Tilburg Clark · ss The Yale Review Spr ’41
  • 40 · None Before Me · Sidney Carroll · ss Cosmopolitan Jul ’49
  • 54 · Putzi · Ludwig Bemelmans · ss, 1935
  • 60 · The Daemon Lover [“The Phantom Lover”] · Shirley Jackson · ss Woman’s Home Companion Feb ’49
  • 77 · Miss Winters and the Wind · Christine N. Govan · ss Tomorrow May ’46
  • 84 · Mr. Death and the Redheaded Woman [“The Rider on the Pale Horse”] · Helen Eustis · ss The Saturday Evening Post Feb 11 ’50
  • 94 · Jeremy in the Wind · Nigel Kneale · ss Tomato Cain, London: Collins, 1949
  • 98 · The Glass Eye · John Keir Cross · ss The Other Passenger, London: Westhouse, 1944
  • 116 · Saint Katy the Virgin · John Steinbeck · ss The Long Valley, New York: Viking, 1938
  • 125 · Night Flight · Josephine Johnson · ss Harper’s Feb ’44
  • 133 · The Cocoon · John B. L. Goodwin · ss Story Sep/Oct ’46
  • 152 · The Hand · Wessel H. Smitter · ss Story Feb ’47
  • 164 · The Sound Machine · Roald Dahl · ss New Yorker Sep 17 ’49
  • 180 · The Laocoön Complex · J. C. Furnas · ss Esquire Apr ’37
  • 194 · I Am Waiting · Christopher Isherwood · ss New Yorker Oct 21 ’39
  • 204 · The Witnesses · William Sansom · ss Fireman Flower, London: Hogarth Press, 1944
  • 210 · The Enormous Radio · John Cheever · ss New Yorker May 17 ’47
  • 223 · Heartburn · Hortense Calisher · ss The American Mercury Jan ’51
  • 235 · The Supremacy of Uruguay · E. B. White · ss New Yorker Nov ’33
  • 239 · The Pedestrian · Ray Bradbury · ss The Reporter Aug 7 ’51; F&SF Feb ’52
  • 245 · A Note for the Milkman · Sidney Carroll · ss Today’s Woman Apr ’50
  • 257 · The Eight Mistresses · Jean Hrolda · ss Esquire Aug ’37
  • 267 · In the Penal Colony · Franz Kafka · nv; Kurt Wolff Verlag, May ’19.
  • 296 · Inflexible Logic · Russell Maloney · ss New Yorker Feb ’40
The Paris Review issue is an unusually good one even for the dependably interesting late issues of George Plimpton's career with the magazine (ending with his death), with a long interview with Grove Press and Evergreen Review publisher Barney Rosset which covers a lot of (fascinating, to me) ground, and an even longer one with Jeanette Winterson, and fiction by Sheila Kohler (an excerpt from her novel Cracks), fantasist Steve Milhauser, Kristina McGrath, Mark Richard and Melvin Jules Bukiet, portfolios by Shirin Neshat and Fred Tomaselli, and poetry by Billy Collins and a host of others. Even though the Review has found some of its footing again, and the heir to Plimpton, quickly fired by the bosses and succeeded by their golden boy who produced a brief slew of dumbed-down issues, has a good magazine of her own in A Public Space, it's still easy to miss the magazine as it was while Plimpton was still willing to try new things, four decades after founding the magazine...

As I noted recently on the blog, here: 
The Ladies Home Journal was offering Saroyan fiction, and young Candice Bergen on the cover, along with a memoir of literary Paris from Katherine Anne Porter.

[FictionMags Index entry, which I'll hope to expand:]
Ladies’ Home Journal [v81 # 7, August 1964] (35¢)

As with the Paris Review issue, I've recently picked up an inexpensive copy of this issue, and while I haven't read the Coward novelet yet, I have read Shirley Hazzard's graceful short (about a couple striving to make up after the wife admitted to a fling with another man)(and I've definitely seen the fine illustration work of Austin Briggs elsewhere over the years), William Saroyan's "Alive" is slightly less compressed and even better (and almost the template of a ?quasi-autobiographical? Saroyan short story, about a young writer's brief career in the funeral industry), Katherine Anne Porter's memoir is brief but charming and mostly of Sylvia Beach and her Shakespeare and Co. in the years between the World Wars...Beach typically attempts to introduce Hemingway and Porter to each other after hours on a rainy night, citing the young writers as two of the best  modern fictioneers, then leaves them in the front of her store as she goes to the back to take care of some bit of business; left alone, the two stare at each other for a moment, say nothing, and Hemingway turns and stalks back out into the downpour. Phyllis McGinley offers a chapter from her soon to be published cautiously feminist account of women's estate in the mid-'60s, Sixpence in Her Shoe. It remains startling how much this magazine, still the legatee of the dominant years of the Curtis Publishing Company and with all the top editorial staff men (women at the next level, and perhaps the real workers), doesn't much resemble the current LHJ except in the other aspects of the magazine...the bad recipes, the fashion tips (though a 19yo Bergen looking alternately professionally cheerful and rather distressed in Mary Quant outfits probably doesn't quite happen the same way in the current magazine), the ads (Tab was just being introduced by Coke, which noted how successful Diet Rite had been for RC Cola)....

For more of today's books, mostly, please see Patti Abbott's blog.