The Golden Apples


The Golden Apples is a short story collection written by Eudora Welty, first published in 1949. The stories form an interrelated cycle, which explores the economic and social plight of the fictional Morgana Mississippi. Author Katherine Anne Porter wrote the introduction to the volume.
The characters in Welty's stories are influenced by classical myth, myth, and rural forklore. Her appreciation of poet William Butler Yeats also informed the collection.

Stories

Retrospective appraisal

Reexamining the collection in 2011, The Independent critic David Evans described the collection as evocative, "But it is her vivid evocations of nature that linger." Another 2011 review in The Guardian wrote that the collection is "brilliantly capturing the precise timbre of a fleeting moment and revealing its startling load."
Critic Claudia [Roth Pierpont|Pierpont, Claudia Roth] reports that "the complex and deeply moving" "June Recital" was "the most personally meaningful of all her stories...which became the centerpiece" of the collection.
Literary critic Daniele Pitavy-Souques regards The Golden Apples as "the central book" in Welty's body of fiction.

Theme

The stories use shared themes and other literary devices to ensure that the stories operate as a unified whole. One reviewer noted that "Allusion and metaphor hang as thick as Spanish moss in Welty's prose."