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The Rocking-Horse Winner, By Shirley Jackson And The Rocking-Horse Winner

Decent Essays

Fiction Essay
By: Martin Bennett 6/1/17

Stuck between a Rock and a Horse Race
No family is perfect, family is family, their love will always be there. At least till you fall off a rocking horse or hit by a few rocks. What I am referring to are these two short stories “The Lottery” by Shirley Jackson, and “The Rocking-Horse Winner’’ by D. H. Lawrence. Now for a brief overview of both these unsettling stories. "The Lottery" is a story of a small town basically consuming a member of its own community, It's like a smoothie of Dismay with figurative cannibalism, a bit of social commentary, a drop of peer pressure, with a twist of tradition. "The Rocking-Horse Winner" Is like a real delicious literary drama seasoned with a dash of social-commentary and a pinch of the supernatural. It follows the short and tragic life of a boy named Paul, who thinks he has remarkable luck after realizing he can predict racehorse winners by furiously riding his rocking horse until he reaches a trance-like state. Unfortunately, Paul's luck begins to kill him…Literally.
Thesis Statement-The Rocking-Horse Winner” and “The Lottery” delivers two different uses of the conflict, theme, and tone. Though, the authors use some similar approaches to grab the reader’s attention by the things the characters do, say and want. The conflict in the two short stories are diverse in almost every way, yet they both lead to the death of a character in the end. In “The Rocking Horse Winner” the conflict of the story was instantly clear. The struggle relates to the Monetary challenges of the family. The need to gain more money lies at the middle of all the conflict that arises in the story. Paul knows his mother desires more money, which encourages him to try to be “lucky”. Paul can foresee the winning race horse after riding his rocking horse. Which lead to Paul covertly betting on horse races, and his uncle and Basset the gardener teaming up with him. Paul got money for his mother; but in the end, it wasn’t enough. The pressure began to effect Paul, as he is determined to make more money. Paul’s obsession with

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