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  1. Summary. Analysis. Miss Adela Strangeworth takes a trip into town to run some errands. She is in good spirits as she breathes in the fresh summer air and reflects on the beauty of the town that she has lived in her entire life. At age 71, she feels a sense of pride and ownership over the town.

  2. Shirley Jackson’s “The Possibility of Evil” shares some features with her popular story “The Lottery” and the rest of her work. These include sudden turns that surprise the reader, the ...

  3. Mrs. Foster. Mrs. Foster is an old woman Miss Strangeworth sends one of her letters to. The letter warns Mrs. Foster that her doctor might botch her upcoming operation. Sawyer, Ian. "The Possibility of Evil Characters." LitCharts. LitCharts LLC, 30 Aug 2022. Web. 21 Oct 2024.

  4. “The Possibility of Evil” is a study of an individual who is at once deeply involved in her community and remarkably isolated from it. Miss Strangeworth is familiar with everyone in town: she knows where the strawberries come from at the grocery store, she is part of the bridge club, she donates to the local library, and she knows everyone’s secrets—or at least she thinks she does.

  5. The title "The Possibility of Evil" suggests that seemingly ordinary and respectable individuals can harbor malevolent tendencies. It implies that evil can exist beneath the surface of everyday ...

  6. The main themes in “The Possibility of Evil” are appearances versus reality, isolation and privilege, and the ubiquity of evil. Appearances versus reality: The story explores the tensions ...

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  8. Don and Helen Crane were really the two most infatuated young parents she had every known, she thought indulgently, looking at the delicately embroidered baby cap and the lace-edged carriage cover. “That little girl is going to grow up expecting luxury all her life,” she said to Helen Crane. Helen laughed.