Skip to main content
PBS logo
 
 

Search - Death in the Woods and Other Stories

Death in the Woods and Other Stories
Death in the Woods and Other Stories
Author: Sherwood Anderson
CONTENTS: DEATH IN THE WOODS — THE RETURN| — THERE SHE IS--SHE IS TAKING HER BATH — THE LOST NOVEL — THE FIGHT — LIKE A QUEEN — THAT SOPHISTICATION — IN A STRANGE TOWN — THESE MOUNTAINEERS — A SENTIMENTAL JOURNEY — A JURY CASE — ANOTHER WIFE — A MEETING SOUTH — THE FLOOD — WHY THEY GOT MARRIED — BROTHER DEATH a selection from the first story...  more » DEATH IN THE WOODS- She was an old woman and lived on a farm near the town in which I lived. All country and small-town people have seen such old women, but no one knows much about them. Such an old woman comes into town driving an old worn-out horse or she comes afoot carrying a basket. She may own a few hens and have eggs to sell. She brings them in a basket and takes them to a grocer. There she trades them in. She gets some salt pork and some beans. Then she gets a pound or two of sugar and some flour. Afterwards she goes to the butcher's and asks for some dog-meat. She may spend ten or fifteen cents, but when she does she asks for something. Formerly the butchers gave liver to any one who wanted to carry it away. In our family we were always having it. Once one of my brothers got a whole cow's liver at the slaughter-house near the fairgrounds in our town. We had it until we were sick of it. It never cost a cent. I have hated the thought of it ever since. The old farm woman got some liver and a soup-bone. She never visited with any one, and as soon as she got what she wanted she lit out for home. It made quite a load for such an old body. No one gave her a lift. People drive right down a road and never notice an old woman like that. There was such an old woman who used to come into town past our house one Summer and Fall when I was a young boy and was sick with what was called inflammatory rheumatism. She went home later carrying a heavy pack on her back. Two or three large gaunt-looking dogs followed at her heels. The old woman was nothing special. She was one of the nameless ones that hardly any one knows, but she got into my thoughts. I have just suddenly now, after all these years, remembered her and what happened. It is a story. Her name was Grimes, and she lived with her husband and son in a small unpainted house on the bank of a small creek four miles from town. The husband and son were a tough lot. Although the son was but twenty-one, he had already served a term in jail. It was whispered about that the woman's husband stole horses and ran them off to some other county. Now and then, when a horse turned up missing, the man had also disappeared. No one ever caught him. Once, when I was loafing at Tom Whitehead's livery-barn, the man came there and sat on the bench in front. Two or three other men were there, but no one spoke to him. He sat for a few minutes and then got up and went away. When he was leaving he turned around and stared at the men. There was a look of defiance in his eyes. "Well, I have tried to be friendly. You don't want to talk to me. It has been so wherever I have gone in this town. If, some day, one of your fine horses turns up missing, well, then what?" He did not say anything actually. "I'd like to bust one of you on the jaw," was about what his eyes said. I remember how the look in his eyes made me shiver.
ISBN-13: 9780871401403
ISBN-10: 0871401401
Pages: 298
Rating:
  ?

0 stars, based on 0 rating
Publisher: Liveright Publishing Corporation
Book Type: Paperback
Members Wishing: 0
Reviews: Member | Amazon | Write a Review
Read All 1 Book Reviews of "Death in the Woods and Other Stories"

Please Log in to Rate these Book Reviews

reviewed Death in the Woods and Other Stories on + 813 more book reviews
This collection, published in 1933, contains two stories that I first read as part of a college curriculum, the title story Death In the Woods and Brother Death. These I enjoyed rereading: actually for the third time. As for the others they are simple and straightforward, but I found the writing to be somewhat choppy: very terse sentences; brief paragraphs. In most the narrator, or some other character, is a writer: some successful, others not. At any rate they are interesting.


Genres: