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  1. Uncle Wiggily in Connecticut" is a short story by J. D. Salinger that appears in his collection Nine Stories. It was originally published in the March 20, 1948 issue of The New Yorker. The main character, Eloise, struggles to come to terms with the life she has created for herself with her husband Lew.

  2. Fiction. Uncle Wiggily In Connecticut. By J. D. Salinger. March 12, 1948. The New Yorker, March 20, 1948 P. 30. Mary Jane, a career girl, visits her former college roommate, Eloise, who is...

  3. El tío Wiggily en Connecticut - J. D. Salinger - Ciudad Seva - Luis López Nieves. [Cuento - Texto completo.] J. D. Salinger. Eran casi las tres cuando Mary Jane encontró por fin la casa de Eloise.

  4. A literary analysis of Salinger's short story, exploring the themes of loss, disillusion, youth, insecurity, love and escape. The story follows Eloise, a woman who drinks and escapes from her unhappy life, and Ramona, her daughter who suffers from myopia.

  5. A short story by J. D. Salinger about a woman who drinks too much and reminisces about her dead lover. She also mistreats her daughter and her maid, and lies to her husband about a car accident.

  6. 6 de dic. de 2010 · Sanford and Sanford use “Uncle Wiggily in Connecticut as an example of one of Salinger’s stories where the “destructive element is uppermost.” In this article, the authors propose that the works in Nine Stories represent either side of the Zen experience – the Zen and the non-Zen, if you will.

  7. Uncle Wiggly in Connecticut (English) It was almost three o’clock when Mary Jane finally found Eloise's house. She explained to Eloise, who had come out to the driveway to meet her, that everything had been absolutely perfect, that she had remembered the way exactly, until she had turned off the Merrick Parkway.