The Moons of Jupiter - Stories

Stories

  • "Chaddeleys and Flemings I: The Connection"
  • "Chaddeleys and Flemings II: The Stone in the Field"
  • "Dulse"
  • "The Turkey Season"
  • "Accident"
  • "Bardon Bus"
  • "Prue"
  • "Labor Day Dinner"
  • "Mrs. Cross and Mrs. Kidd"
  • "Hard-Luck Stories"
  • "Visitors"
  • "The Moons of Jupiter"
Works by Alice Munro
Collections
  • Dance of the Happy Shades
  • Lives of Girls and Women
  • Something I've Been Meaning to Tell You
  • Who Do You Think You Are?
  • The Moons of Jupiter
  • The Progress of Love
  • Friend of My Youth
  • Open Secrets
  • Selected Stories
  • The Love of a Good Woman
  • Hateship, Friendship, Courtship, Loveship, Marriage
  • No Love Lost
  • Vintage Munro
  • Runaway
  • The View from Castle Rock
  • Too Much Happiness
  • Dear Life
Short stories "How I Met My Husband"


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Famous quotes containing the word stories:

    If you like to make things out of wood, or sew, or dance, or style people’s hair, or dream up stories and act them out, or play the trumpet, or jump rope, or whatever you really love to do, and you love that in front of your children, that’s going to be a far more important gift than anything you could ever give them wrapped up in a box with ribbons.
    Fred M. Rogers (20th century)

    Television programming for children need not be saccharine or insipid in order to give to violence its proper balance in the scheme of things.... But as an endless diet for the sake of excitement and sensation in stories whose plots are vehicles for killing and torture and little more, it is not healthy for young children. Unfamiliar as yet with the full story of human response, they are being misled when they are offered perversion before they have fully learned what is sound.
    Dorothy H. Cohen (20th century)

    A man is known by the books he reads, by the company he keeps, by the praise he gives, by his dress, by his tastes, by his distastes, by the stories he tells, by his gait, by the notion of his eye, by the look of his house, of his chamber; for nothing on earth is solitary but every thing hath affinities infinite.
    Ralph Waldo Emerson (1803–1882)