Lamb To The Slaughter
Lamb To The Slaughter
Lamb To The Slaughter
AUTHOR BIOGRAPHY
Roald Dahl His parents were from Norway, but he was born in Wales, 1916. In 1942, he went to Washington as Assistant Air Attach. There, he started writing short stories. In 1943, he published his first children's book "The Gremlins " with Walt Disney and in 1945 his first book of short stories appeared in the US. His marriage with the actress Patricia Neal was unhappy. He got divorced in 1983 and married Felicity Crosland. He received several awards, such as the Edgar Allan Poe Award. Roald Dahl died in November 1990.
AUTHORS WORKS
SYNOPSIS
Mary Maloney is a devoted wife and expectant mother. She waits happily each night for the arrival of her husband Patrick, home from work at the police station. On this particular night, though, she can tell something is wrong. In disbelief, she listens as Patrick tells her that he is leaving her for another woman. Dazed, she goes into the kitchen to prepare their supper and pulls a large frozen leg of lamb from the deep freeze. Still numb, she carries it into the living room and without warning bashes her husband over the head with it.
As she looks at Patrick lying dead on the floor, she slowly begins to come back to her senses. Immediately she realizes the ramifications of what she has done. Not wanting her unborn child to suffer as a result of her crime, she begins planning her alibi. She places the leg of lamb in a pan in the oven and goes down to the corner grocery to get some food for "Patrick's dinner" (making sure the grocer sees her normal and cheerful state of mind). She returns home and screams when she finds Patrick lying on the floor.
She calls the police and informs them that she found her husband lying dead on the floor. Within hours swarms of officers are searching the house and conducting an investigation. Mary's story of coming home from the grocer and finding him is corroborated as she had planned. While the police are searching fruitlessly into the night for the murder weapon, Mary offers them some lamb that she had prepared for dinner. They are happy to oblige. While they lounge in the kitchen and discuss the case (their mouths "sloppy" with meat), Mary Maloney sits in the living room and giggles softly to herself.
LITERARY EXPECTS
The
irony
The cops cant find any clues because they think an intruder committed the murder. It was ironic because the murder weapon was literally right under their noses because they were eating it.
Black humor is the use of the grotesque, morbid, or absurd for darkly comic purposes.
The image of the cheerful housewife suddenly smashing her husbands skull with the frozen joint of meat intended for their supper and then being eaten by the policemen is the ultimate use of black humor.
BIBLIOGRAPHY
http://www.roalddahlfans.com/shortstories/lamb.php
http://www.poemhunter.com/roald-dahl/poems/ http://www.scribd.com/doc/37851624/Lamb-to-theSlaughter-Critical-Summary
http://www.bookrags.com/studyguidelambslaughter/crit.html