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Tessa Hadley

Tessa Hadley has contributed short stories to The New Yorker since 2002, when her first novel, “Accidents in the Home,” was long-listed for the Guardian First Book Award. Since then, Hadley has published six highly praised novels, including “The London Train,” “Clever Girl,” “The Past,” “Late in the Day,” and, most recently, “After the Funeral and Other Stories.” She is also the author of three short-story collections, “Sunstroke,” “Married Love,” and “Bad Dreams and Other Stories,” all of which were New York Times Notable Books. In 2016, she was awarded the Windham-Campbell Prize for fiction.

The Maths Tutor

The wolf wasn’t at the door, she thought then, with that sort of grimly satisfied, righteous outrage it was too easy to get addicted to. The wolf was inside the house!

Coda

The Bunty Club

Cecilia Awakened

Bad Dreams

Valentine

Experience

The Stain

Clever Girl

Honor

The Trojan Prince

The Maths Tutor

The wolf wasn’t at the door, she thought then, with that sort of grimly satisfied, righteous outrage it was too easy to get addicted to. The wolf was inside the house!

Coda

The Bunty Club

Cecilia Awakened

Bad Dreams

Valentine

Experience

The Stain

Clever Girl

Honor

The Trojan Prince