Don’t get too lost in all I say
Though at the time I really felt that way
But that was then, now it’s today
In the last 2 or 3 lines, I promised to tell you why I recently watched an obscure French movie titled The Murderer Lives at Number 21 – in French, it’s called L’assassin habite au 21 – which was directed by Henri-Georges Clouzot and released in 1942.
Let’s begin at the beginning. Better yet, let’s begin before the beginning.
* * * * *
In 2024, Andrea Skinner – the youngest daughter of the late Nobel Prize-winning short-story writer Alice Munro – told the Toronto Star that her stepfather had begun to sexually abuse her in 1976, when she was nine years old.
Skinner had told Munro about the abuse – which lasted for several years – in 1992. Munro separated from her husband for a few months but then went back to him, telling her daughter that she had been told about the abuse too late and that she loved her husband too much to leave him. Skinner cut off contact with Munro after her mother objected to Skinner not wanting her stepfather to have any contact with her children.
I read about the abuse and Munro’s response to it – or, more accurately, her nonresponse to it – in a lengthy article in the New Yorker, which had published over 60 of Munro’s short stories. (I subscribed to the New Yorker for many years, and read most of those stories. But they hadn’t made much of an impression on me – perhaps they appeared one at a time over a four-decade time period.)
The New Yorker piece about Munro and her daughter cited several of her stories that seemed in retrospect to have been colored by Munro’s relationship with her second husband and her knowledge of her daughter’s abuse at his hands. Some of them featured mothers who felt guilty about something bad that had happened to their children. Others were about timid wives who seemed to be in thrall to overbearing husbands.
I made a note of the titles of those stories and decided to read them so I could judge for myself what their contents had to say about Munro’s state of mind when she wrote them.
But after I had read the stories cited in the New Yorker article, I was moved to read all of Munro’s 150-odd short stories – in order of their publication, of course. So I went on my public library website and reserved copies of all fourteen of her short story collections. Once I had amassed copies of all fourteen volumes, I began to read them.
I read the first collection – Dance of the Happy Shades, which came out in 1968 – in April of last year. I finished the final one – Dear Life, which was published in 2012 – almost exactly one year later.
My first thought upon closing Dear Life was to go back to Dance of the Happy Shades and start the process over again. That’s because Munro may be the greatest writer to have ever lived – or at least the greatest writer I’ve ever read.
On their surface, her characters – most of whom are women – aren’t particularly interesting. Like her, many of them grew up in rural Ontario almost a century ago and lived unremarkable lives. After they graduated from high school, they either got married, or got the kind of jobs that single women usually took in those days – or they continued living at home to take care of a sick parent. (Many of the ones who married and had children eventually got divorced and moved away from Ontario – as did Munro.)
I can’t really explain why I cares much for Munro’s character. All I know is that I find them utterly real.
I am very glad that I discovered Munro and read every one of her stories. But it’s depressing to me to think about how many other great books out there that I don’t know about and will never read.
* * * * *
While my therapist finally convinced me that I don’t have obsessive-compulsive personality disorder – or “OCPD” – I often exhibit several of the symptoms of OCPD.
Those symptoms include:
1. A preoccupation with details, rules, schedules, organization, and lists;
2. A striving to do things perfectly;
3. Excessive devotion to being productive;
4. Rigidity and stubbornness.
I’ll let you decide for yourself whether my decision to read each and every one of Munro’s stories – in chronological order – makes me sound like someone with any or all of the above characteristics.
I think the answer is pretty obvious.
* * * * *
What does all of that have to do with The Murderer Lives at Number 21, the obscure French movie I wrote about in the previous 2 or 3 lines?
When I said in the previous 2 or 3 lines that I would tell you the story behind my decision to watch that movie in this 2 or 3 lines, I fully intended to do just that. But to quote the lyrics to today’s featured song – which were written by the late Dave Mason – “That was then, now it’s today.”
The next 2 or 3 lines will absotively, posilutely contain the rest of the story. I promise!
In the meantime, click here to enjoy the original recording of “Feelin’ Alright,” which was released in 1968 on Traffic’s eponymous debut album. (Joe Cocker’s cover of that song sold more records, but I prefer Traffic’s version.)
Click here to buy “Feelin’ Alright” from Amazon.













