The Wrysons
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"The Wrysons" is a short story by John Cheever published by ''
The New Yorker ''The New Yorker'' is an American weekly magazine featuring journalism, commentary, criticism, essays, fiction, satire, cartoons, and poetry. Founded as a weekly in 1925, the magazine is published 47 times annually, with five of these issues ...
'' on September 15, 1958. The work was included in the collection volume '' Some People, Places, and Things That Will Not Appear in My Next Novel'' (1961) published by
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. The story also appears in ''
The Stories of John Cheever ''The Stories of John Cheever'' is a 1978 short story collection by American author John Cheever. It contains some of his most famous stories, including "The Enormous Radio", "Goodbye, My Brother", "The Country Husband", " The Five-Forty-Eight" ...
'' (1978).


Plot

Donald and Irene Wryson are a married couple living in the upper-middle class suburb of Shady Hill. They have one child, a girl named Dolly. The couple have no literary or artistic interests, and pursue gardening more for appearance than pleasure. They devote most their time and energy petitioning for zoning laws to maintain the social and ethnic exclusivity of their largely
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community. Though they rarely socialize, the couple avidly prepare and send hundreds of Christmas cards to local acquaintances. Both Donald and Irene each have a secret eccentricity: Irene Wryson suffers from excruciating nightmares about a dystopian world in the aftermath of a nuclear holocaust. She does not tell Donald about these recurring dreams, which include explicit scenes of carnage and death. Set in Shady Hill, one of the dreams concerns a phantasmagoric mercy killing, in which Irene attempts to administer poison to Dolly as radioactive fallout descends on their house. Donald's oddness manifests itself in his baking of cakes and cookies, a skill he learned as a boy from his mother, a grass widow. He finds that the activity provides a brief antidote to his depression. These furtive nighttime activities go undetected by Irene. One night, Irene awakes from her night terrors and detects a sweet, burning odor. Disoriented by her dream, she is convinced she smells the smoke plume from an atomic bomb. She goes downstairs and discovers Donald asleep at the kitchen table, smoke pouring from the oven. He has neglected to remove his Lady Baltimore cake before it was burnt. Irene tells Donald she thought it was a hydrogen bomb that had exploded. He informs her it is merely a cake. Their secrets exposed, neither of them have an epiphany concerning the other's suffering. The Wrysons suppress these discoveries in the interest of preserving the normalcy of their suburban existence.


Style and theme

Literary critic Lynne Waldeland writes: Waldeland observes that the story "ends quickly and effectively with the couple exactly the same as they were at the beginning." Literary critic Samuel Coales comments on the characters as social types: Donald and Irene Wrysons "suburban fear of change" is conveyed by Cheever's stylistic handling of the story. A tone of mockery is evident, but the "calm and graceful prose" balances this impression. The graphic descriptions of violence and despair in Irene's dreams "seems to be sacrificed to the beautiful calm that the style itself creates." Coale offers this caveat: Writer and editor Tim Lieder calls it the quintessential story about 1950s fears (nuclear war and actual emotions) and is very impressed with the way that Cheever dangles a melodramatic ending in front of the reader before choosing a sad ending about how these two will never reveal their fears to each other.https://www.tumblr.com/marlowe1-blog/706578911415386112/the-wrysons-the-stories-of-john-cheever?source=share


Footnotes


Sources

* Bailey, Blake. 2009. Notes on Text in ''John Cheever: Collected Stories and Other Writing.''
The Library of America The Library of America (LOA) is a nonprofit publisher of classic American literature. Founded in 1979 with seed money from the National Endowment for the Humanities and the Ford Foundation, the LOA has published over 300 volumes by authors rang ...
. Pp. 1025-1028 *Coale, Samuel. 1977. ''John Cheever''.
Frederick Ungar Publishing Company Frederick Ungar Publishing Company was a New York publishing firm which was founded in 1940. History The Frederick Ungar Publishing Company published over 2,000 titles, including reference books such as the ''Encyclopedia of World Literature in ...
, New York. *O'Hara, James E. 1989. ''John Cheever: A Study of the Short Fiction''.
Twayne Publishers Gale is a global provider of research and digital learning resources. The company is based in Farmington Hills, Michigan, west of Detroit. It has been a division of Cengage since 2007. The company, formerly known as Gale Research and the Gale Gro ...
, Boston Massachusetts. Twayne Studies in Short Fiction no 9. *Waldeland, Lynne. 1979. ''John Cheever''.
Twayne Publishers Gale is a global provider of research and digital learning resources. The company is based in Farmington Hills, Michigan, west of Detroit. It has been a division of Cengage since 2007. The company, formerly known as Gale Research and the Gale Gro ...
, G. K. Hall & Company, Boston, Massachusetts. {{DEFAULTSORT:Wrysons, The 1958 short stories American short stories Short stories by John Cheever Works originally published in The New Yorker