Kiss Me Again, Stranger by Daphne DuMaurier – Selection 6 of #DealMeIn2020

The Card: ♦Three♦ of Diamonds.

The Suit: For Deal Me In 2020, ♦♦♦Diamonds♦♦♦ is my suit for stories from favorite female authors.

The Author: Daphne DuMaurier – surely you already know of her from her most famous novel, Rebecca, which was also a Best Picture academy award winner for Alfred Hitchcock. If you don’t know DuMaurier, stop reading this blog and start reading THAT book. 🙂 I’ve also blogged about her story “Don’t Look Now” previously.

The Story: “Kiss Me Again, Stranger” from the author’s collection of stories, “The Birds and Other Short Stories.” This is one of four selections from that book that I’ll be reading for this year’s Deal Me In challenge. I’m most looking forward to reading “The Birds” – I wonder when fate will deal me up that story?

BUT…what is Deal Me In? I’m glad you asked!  Full details may be found here  but generally speaking it’s a reading challenge where participants try to read one short story a week for the year, the reading order being determined by the luck of the draw. See here for the list I’ll be reading in 2020. 

Kiss Me Again, Stranger

“I’m one for routine. I like to get on with my job, and then when the day’s work’s over settle down to a paper and a smoke and a bit of music on the wireless, variety or something of the sort, and then turn in early. I never had much use for girls, not even when I was doing my time in the army. I was out in the Middle East too, Port Said and that.”

I’ll admit to being a fan of routines myself. I’m sure many of us are. With so much – especially these days – competing for our attention, it’s nice to have a few routines where we can, at least temporarily, hand over our controls to the autopilot. The beginning of this story warmed me up to the (unnamed) main character immediately, as he describes how his Post WWII- life had settled into a comfortable mix of routines. What could possibly jar him out of his comfort zone, though? Why, a mysterious and beautiful girl of course, and DuMaurier wastes little time in introducing one.

On an evening’s trip to the cinema, our narrator becomes smitten by one of the theater’s usherettes…

“Well, then I saw her. They dress the girls up no end in some of these places, velvet tams and all, making them proper guys. They hadn’t made a guy out of this one, though. She had copper hair, page-boy style I think they call it, and blue eyes, the kind that look short-sighted but see further than you think, and go dark by night, nearly black, and her mouth was sulky-looking as if she was fed up, and it would take someone giving her the world to make her smile.”

After some limited interaction with the usherette, causing him to be further infatuated – after the show (the last of the day) he does what any good stalker would do, waits for her to leave work and go home. He follows her to a bus stop and gets on with her, sitting right next to her. She doesn’t seem to mind, though and her oddly charming and nonchalant attitude sinks the hook further in. He’s totally under her spell.

“They had a word for it in the army, when a girl gets a fellow that way, so he can’t see straight or hear right or know what he’s doing; and I thought it a lot of cock, or it only happened to drunks, and now I knew it was true and it had happened  to me.”

What happens to end the story I won’t spoil, but there is so clearly something odd about this girl that neither we, nor the narrator have yet to discover. There are some “red flags” as well as foreshadowing – like when she wants to get off the bus at “the corner where the cemetery is” and how she seems suddenly concerned and asks the narrator,“YOU weren’t in the Air Force, were you.” I was almost expecting a supernatural resolution to this story but that wasn’t what Du Maurier had in mind…

I think this is my favorite read so far in the early going of #DealMeIn2020!

What about YOU? What short stories of Daphne Du Maurier have you read? Do you have a favorite or a recommendation? I have three more to go for this year’s Deal Me In challenge, but I’m always “allowed” to read other stories. 🙂

Next up for Deal Me In: My first club draw, Circle and Salt by Sara Cieto from the “Grimm, Grit, and Gasoline” anthology. Can’t wait.

10 Comments

  1. Dale said,

    February 10, 2020 at 2:07 pm

    “…a paper and a smoke and a bit of music on the wireless…”

    This sounds good to me even if I don’t smoke and don’t read a paper much anymore.

    And I have to admit that I haven’t read anything by DuMaurier. Not even Rebecca. I will have to change that. I am familiar with her, though, and the Hitchcock connection.

    I’m looking forward to hearing about the other three stories.

    Liked by 2 people

  2. marianallen said,

    February 12, 2020 at 10:47 am

    I love anything DuMaurier. She and Shirley Jackson are the queens of blending the ordinary and the deeply creepy.

    Liked by 1 person

    • Jay said,

      February 12, 2020 at 10:53 am

      Hi Marian,”Blending the ordinary and the deeply creepy” – that’s a great way of describing their special talents. DuMaurier came up last night at my monthly reading group at work (I can’t call it a book club because our ‘by-laws’ limit our reading to works that can be read in less than an hour – and so we read mostly short stories with the occasional essay or poem) last night. We once read her excellent story “Don’t Look Now” and last night someone was describing her novel “House on the Strand”(-? or something like that) to me and it sounded just amazing and has gone onto my TBR list.

      Liked by 1 person

  3. Jason C, said,

    February 19, 2020 at 2:37 am

    Similar to Dale, I have not read anything by DuMaurier either although I have seen Hitchcock’s ‘The Birds’ so does that count? This story sounds pretty great and if her writing can be compared to Shirley Jackson as Marian has pointed out then sign me up! Excellent review, thanks for sharing.

    Liked by 1 person

    • Jay said,

      February 19, 2020 at 10:37 am

      Thanks, Jason! I’m not sure I’ve read anything “bad” yet by DuMaurier! I’ve seen the film version of “The Birds” many times (scared the heck out of me when I was a kid). Hitchcock’s version of Rebecca is outstanding.

      Like

      • Jason C. said,

        February 20, 2020 at 6:46 am

        Birds is such a creepy movie but I’m not sure how well it hold up if I watched it again. Hitchcock was a genius. I have actually seen Rebecca but it was years ago and it has completely faded from memory so I should definitely read the novel!

        I ended up checking out your wonderful review for “Don’t Look Now” and was so impressed that I dropped a different story and added it to my DMI challenge instead! I’m totally psyched to read it.

        Liked by 1 person

        • Jay said,

          February 20, 2020 at 9:08 am

          That’s good to hear you’ll be reading Don’t Look Now. My “after work short story book club” read it a couple years ago and it was a big hit with them!

          Like

  4. February 20, 2020 at 12:48 am

    I have read Rebecca years ago but not any of her short stories, and of course, watched The Birds! This story sounds pretty cool.. My week 6 is finally up https://www.ladyinreadwrites.com/the-things-the-play/

    Like

  5. hkatz said,

    March 4, 2020 at 10:49 pm

    Yeah, the cemetery bus stop is a creepy bit of foreshadowing!

    Two Du Maurier stories I recommend from her collection Don’t Look Now are: The Blue Lenses and Split Second. The Blue Lenses especially has a Twilight Zone episode feel to it.

    Liked by 1 person

  6. May 25, 2020 at 2:50 pm

    I have not read any short stories by Daphne Du Maurier but I have read her novels including My Cousin Rachel (my favorite), Jamaica Inn, Rebecca (who could miss it), and Hungry Hill. Phenomenal writer. Look forward to read her short stories. Thanks for the input on Kiss Me Again, Stranger.

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