The Doll-House | |
Author: | James Cross |
Language: | English |
Genre: | Science fiction short story |
Publication Type: | Anthology |
Published In: | Dangerous Visions |
Publisher: | Doubleday |
Media Type: | Hardback |
Pub Date: | 1967 |
"The Doll-House" is a short story by Hugh Jones Parry, under the name "James Cross".[1] It was first published in Harlan Ellison's 1967 science fiction anthology Dangerous Visions.[1]
When Jim Eliot is in financial trouble, he asks for help from his wife's uncle, who gives him a dollhouse containing a miniature oracle. Due to his lack of patience he loses this oracle in the end.
Per Algis Budrys, the short story was one of two stories that was "simply submitted by the authors ' literary agent when Harlan got desperate for material".[2]
Ted Gioia described "The Doll-House" as "a very appealing mixture of ancient mythology and modern psychodrama".[1] Algis Budrys said that it was a Weird Tales-style story, only published in Dangerous Visions because "Harlan got desperate for material".[3]
The manuscript for "The Doll-House" is held in the Hugh Parry collection at Boston University.[4]