In the Sixties (short story): Difference between revisions

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|release date      = 1 November 2009
|release date      = 1 November 2009
|publisher        = Salt Publishing
|publisher        = Salt Publishing
|format            = Short stroy
|format            = Short story
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Revision as of 16:33, 23 July 2023

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In the Sixties was a short story published in the Twelve Stories anthology.

The short story had been originally published in the charity anthology Walking in Eternity, and later in the 2021 charity anthology Bafflement and Devotion: Iris at the Edges.

Plot

A man is waiting at King's Cross station for a train to a spiritual camp up in Wales. In a chalet, Sylvia Plath and Stevie Smith confess that they would want the Cyborg-men to invade Britain. Later, the man and the other people at the camp are hypnotised by a mystic, who tells them that they have to go back to London and destroy Dr Oho. The man finds himself at Dr Oho's party in his home in Maida Vale, where a public call box was the centre-piece.

Joe Orton and Jamie the Highlander have sex, and Angus Wilson, Iris Murdoch, and Dr Oho talk about books, an "Iris" attends the party and is intimate with Robin, and the party wages on. Later on that night, the streets flood. The next morning, many of the guests go inside Dr Oho's public call box, and they and the box disappear, leaving Maida Vale silent. In the North-East of England, in a hospital in Jarrow, newborn Paul Magrs sleeps happily in a cot, rolling his eyes at his amusing dream.

Characters

References

Notes

  • In the Sixties was originally published in the charity anthology Walking in Eternity. When it was reprinted in Twelve Stories, copyright-violating names were changed. The original version is outside the scope of this wiki.
  • In this story, the protagonist is actually left unnamed. Paul Magrs is definitely the most likely candidate, but there is still a possibility that the protagonist could be David (who is actually a stand-in for Paul Magrs in some stories).
  • Although it wasn't stated within the narrative, it's highly likely that Magrs' dream was influenced by the Doctor Who TV series and 1960s popular culture.

Continuity

External links