Dancing Girls (short story collection) explained

Dancing Girls & Other Stories
Author:Margaret Atwood
Country:Canada
Language:English
Publisher:McClelland & Stewart
Pub Date:1977 (first edition)
Media Type:Print
Pages:245 p.
Oclc:229377541

Dancing Girls & Other Stories is a collection of short stories by Canadian author Margaret Atwood, originally published in 1977 by McClelland & Stewart,[1] Toronto. It was the winner of the St. Lawrence Award for Fiction and the award of The Periodical Distributors of Canada for Short Fiction.

The collection's fourteen stories feature ordinary people, including a farmer, a birdwatcher, an author, a mother and a travel agent, and their inevitably biased perceptions of the world.

Stories

Editions based on the original 1977 McClelland & Stewart edition contain the following fourteen stories:

Editions based on the revised Simon & Schuster 1982 edition contain the following fourteen stories:

This effectively swaps "The War in the Bathroom" and "Rape Fantasies" for "Betty" and "The Sin Eater".

Notes and References

  1. Book: Dancing Girls and Other Stories.