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Black Tickets

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Originally published
  
1979


Author
  
Jayne Anne Phillips

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Similar
  
Works by Jayne Anne Phillips, Other books

Black Tickets (1979) is a collection of short stories by American writer Jayne Anne Phillips. The collection was published by Delacorte/Seymour Lawrence.

Contents

"Wedding Picture"

The story begins with the narrator looking at his/her mother's wedding picture. The narrator notices details about his/her mother and also the man in the picture which could be his/her father. The narrator then alludes to the death of the man in the wedding picture and about the loss of religion. The picture was taken in the 1940s, so the mother seems to have been pressured to remarry shortly after the death of her first husband. Phillips writes in a dark tone that leads the reader to believe that the lives of the mother and the narrator were not easy and did not go as planned. The narrator does not seem to resent the mother, so it seems that the mother has done the best she can with the circumstances of her life.

"Lechery"

A fourteen-year-old prostitute reflects upon her past. She recalls Uncle Wumpy, a man who bought her from Minnie, her then-foster parent who made her work at a luncheonette. The narrator has threesomes with Wumpy and Kitty, Wumpy’s drug-addict partner, though Wumpy refuses to have sex with the narrator. The narrator reveals that Wumpy is the one who introduced her to prostitution. Sometimes the narrator fantasizes about Natalie, an eight-year-old girl she met while in foster care. She recalls when she and Natalie were playing in a shed when their foster father came in and forced Natalie to perform sexual acts on him. Sometimes the narrator fantasizes about Wumpy.

"Black Tickets"

Black Tickets begins with the narrator expressing his desire for Jamaica Delila. He discusses in depth how he watches her and notices that she likes to draw on herself, giving herself “tattoos.” The narrator then begins to expand on his working with Raymond in the coffee shop across from where Jamaica works. Following another fantasy of Jamaica, the narrator begins to tell of being in jail and how his father was not existent in his and his mother’s lives. The narrator then changes abruptly to a recollection of the time he shared with Jamaica. In remembering his time with her, he also speaks of abuse and death. While telling of the times that his brother, Raymond, got Jamaica’s attention, the narrator becomes quite jealous because he always paid attention to her but she preferred that Raymond did not look at her even. Following another flashback to a time where Jamaica told him about how she had wanted to cut her hair and be the boy of the family, the narrator resumes his thought in present day and how he will be soon headed to a larger jail. He then recalls the last day that he saw Jamaica, when he woke up and her hair was all cut off.

"The Powder of the Angels, and I'm Yours"

This story begins as a flashback of an experience a girl has with drugs. She is always high on cocaine and it is suggested that she has a mental illness. She lives in a Spanish speaking country with a man named Hernando whom she met while in rehabilitation in California. Hernando, also a drug addict, and the girl get high together and she sends pictures of it to her friends back in the US. While smuggling drugs across the border they stop on a farmer’s land after Hernando overdoses. They make a ruckus and the farmer runs out of his/her house and comes after them. The girl tries to escape with Hernando, but the narrator does not elaborate on what ends up happening to the both of them. Then, there is a time jump to the girl’s recovery back in the US where she is in a sanitarium where the priests are blessing all of the people in rehabilitation.

"1934"

This story depicts a depression era family’s struggles with their father, J.T., succumbing to senility. The narrator, J.T.’s daughter Francie, highlights the background of her father’s financial downfall and how his failing business causes him to spiral into a hysterical pitfall. He does things such as wandering the streets and calling his daughter ‘Frank’. Throughout the story, Francie becomes convinced by her grandmother that she is crazy like her father. Later, J.T. takes Francie out for a car ride and ends up crashing over a cliff. Everyone is still alive after the accident, but Franice continues to believe that she is crazy when she envisions people in houses off in the distance. However, her mother Lacey attempts to alleviate her concerns by showing her there are no people in the house and walking her through the empty homes. The story concludes with J.T. being sent away from the family.

"Solo Dance"

This story shows a broken relationship between a family. A daughter visits her father while he is in the hospital dying from cancer. The father is divorced from her mother, and it is obvious that this still affects him. The daughter remains by his side and helps with simple duties such as reading him his cards or helping him shave, but they do not share one word. This amplifies the negative emotions the father is feeling about the divorce, how he is still troubled with it, and how it hurts the relationship he has with his daughter.

"Happy"

This story describes a woman’s internal battle for her feelings for a male character. It is undetermined if the male character is a lover or the narrator’s child. The author creates two possible paths for the narrator’s love, but does not specify who she is talking about. The possibility of a child appears when the narrator says, “small soft hands, a bread of desire rising in her stomach”. This hypothesis of a child is seen in “a bread of desire” which means new life. The lover aspect appears in the first sentence, “She knew if she loved him she could make him happy, but she didn’t”. The narrator never confirms who the male is and if she will love him.

"The Patron"

A man named James narrates the story, and is a caretaker for an old sick man. He takes care of the man eight hours a day and during that time, the old man is completely dependent on him for all basic needs. The old man is extremely wealthy and used to work as a dance teacher. He was so passionate about dance that he regularly has his old students come and perform for him. Throughout the story the narrator speculates the old mans homosexuality while keeping his own sexuality unconfirmed. When James is not working for the old man he spends a lot time at a nearby bar watching clips from old films. Although he spends much time taking care of the old man, his motives are questionable as he entertains selfish thoughts of stealing from the old man. James risks the health of the old man by manipulating his medications and pocketing a portion of the allotted amounts. In the end the narrator realizes that although the old man has his fortune, he is willing to sacrifice it to not feel alone.

"Strangers in the Night"

The narrator begins the story by telling the readers that she often thinks about eating and sleeping. This could be taken as her attempt to 'fit in' and feel more 'normal'. She then discusses her love making, which evokes a sense of loneliness, especially when realizing her love making is not love making at all, but meaningless sex with strangers, as the title tells us. Throughout the entire story, Mayne does not write directly, but leaves much of the meaning of the story open to interpretation.

--

This is a second interpretation of the story. The short story begins with a statement that attempts to connect to the reader, and basically all of humanity. Everyone eats and sleeps, therefore the narrator is attempting to come across as normal. However, she feels an unusual connection between sleeping, eating, and sex. In sleep, she feels free and weightless and able to escape reality. In eating, she feels sensual and intimate. In sex, she also feels limitless and liberated, but also as if she is attached or being held down, suggesting that her morals are pulling her down as she has sex with potential strangers. When the narrator tries to explain these things to him (who could be basically anyone, considering the title), he attempts to comfort her but doesn’t seem to truly listen to her feelings. She still feels as though she is in a shadow, or not truly present.

"Souvenir"

This short story portrays the life of a mother and daughter—the daughter, Kate, a young graduate student struggling to pay rent and find love, and a middle-aged widowed mother in an empty house. The mother develops a brain tumor the doctors believe to be malignant. However, Kate’s brother Robert doesn’t wish to tell their mother. Meanwhile, Kate develops symptoms similar to her mother’s: headaches, delusions, and confusion. The two struggle together against the brutality and loneliness of life as they care for one another symbiotically. Kate realizes her duty and privilege in caring for her mother as she falls ill, for Kate’s mother cared for her in her times of need. The story concludes when the two ride a Ferris wheel together, and Kate’s mother assures her that the storm is “going to pass over” (198), symbolizing an attempt at optimism and strength through the circumstances they must face together.

"What it Takes to Keep a Young Girl Alive"

The short story is about a young girl, Sue, trying to make it on her own. Sue gets a job at an amusement park with many other young kids. All the kids working at the park go through a lot of struggles to keep on working. Things get so difficult that at one point a coworker passes away (commits suicide?). The boys working in the kitchen tally up which girl cries the most throughout the year. This short story gives a tone of sadness and gives an inside glimpse into the darker and grittier side of an amusement park work.

"Cheers"

A ten-year-old girl visits a sewing woman to have a cheerleading outfit made. As the woman works, the girl observes her unflattering make up and pitiful living conditions. A postcard hung on a wall depicting Florida and a television playing "Queen for a Day" in the background serve to further amplify the feelings of longing and misfortune present in the story, and stand in contrast with the young girl's naive and relatively carefree perception of the world.

"Snow"

The story begins in late summer of 1948 in Spenser, South Carolina. Phillips introduces a young girl named Molly watching her blind mother, Laura, dance at a carnival. Laura and her husband Randal met at a school for deaf, dumb, and blind, where he taught her how to read Braille and make love when she was sixteen. Randal lost his sight when he was seven from the measles and diphtheria and often tries to remember the shape of hands and fingers. Laura lost her sight at a young age from a car crash. She remembers the sight of rain and what her face looked like at that age, but mostly sees only blackness now. At eighteen, she became pregnant with Molly and married Randal, who was thirty-eight at the time. Later, they have a son, Callie, who from the beginning of the story, has deteriorating sight. He is given glasses and wears them all the time, but his vision continues to fade. As it does, it seems his nose bleeds frequently and becomes severe enough that he must be taken to the hospital.

Throughout the story, snow is used as a symbol to innocently hide what lies beneath it. Laura remembers a time when she made a snow angel, but it was quickly hidden by more snow. Randal tells Molly a story about a garden and when she asks where it is, he tells her it is hidden under snow and can't find it. Although the snow looks beautiful, it also coldly hides death underneath it.

"Accidents"

A woman tells her readers about her life from two perspectives. She has been in an accident that may have caused head trauma, a story in which she uses to lure men in and have sexual relations with them. She also is referring to her sexual encounters as "accidents." The difference between her physical injury, or these "accidents" as representations of her sexual encounters is not clear; however, the narrator's confused tone on the subject and inability to remember certain events contribute to the lack of clarity and promotes her unstable state. She concludes her story saying, "I hurt my head again, I hit it on the bed," which hints toward sexual meaning, as well as a real physical injury.

"Gemcrack"

The narrator of this cryptic tale is a mass murderer mainly interested in targeting females. The story begins with a description of the act of murder from the narrators point of view, and then goes one to recount the murderer's past and consequential source of his obsession—from his childhood spent in an economically depressed mid-1900's Bronx neighborhood to his days spent learning how to operate a variety of powerful weapons with ease in the U.S. military. The reader is treated to Phillips' familiar poetic prose and stream of consciousness narrative in this haunting tale of violent alienation in modern day America.

References

Black Tickets Wikipedia