Bullying

Netflix’s ANNE Bridges the Divide Between Us and Our Childhood Dreams

Netflix’s ANNE Bridges the Divide Between Us and Our Childhood Dreams

The ways in which Anne, the mercurial, earnest girl at the center of the story lived, learned, grew, and blundered her way through life resonated with me, a perennial outsider and dreamer, wounded by things that, like Anne’s cruel treatment at the hands of the Hammonds and the orphanage asylum, lurked in the corners of things—never forgotten, but making the joys of a safe refuge all the more poignant, warm, and vital.

|

The Best Short Story I Read in a Lit Mag This Week: “Nola” by Jacqueline Doyle

  It’s fairly common to read about fictional protagonists whose past traumas serve as obstacles in their present lives. But often those traumas are at the hands of another, whether a parent, lover, spouse, a childhood bully, or even a childhood friend. In “Nola” (Monkeybicycle), Jacqueline Doyle explores a protagonist haunted not by what happened…