Today I attended a short story discussion about "The Doctor's Wife" by John Updike. It involved reading that short story together and then talking about it. There were only eight of us in the group with our two leaders. Last month, we listened to those two leaders read "The Necklace" by Guy du Maupassant, but we had no copies to read along. We couldn't retain details and discuss it very well, having no copies in hand that we could refer to and quote from. This was better, but we had different font sizes on the copies for those who needed big print. That meant we couldn't refer to what's on different pages because our copies didn't have the same number of pages.
"The Doctor's Wife" was first published in The New Yorker in 1961, according to Writing Atlas, HERE, where you can also read a plot summary of the 5,400-word story after this overview:
On the beaches of a remote British Caribbean Island, a mixed-race family enjoys a relaxing vacation. However, a simple conversation with a local white woman about the island soon evolves into one of introspection and racial discrimination.












