The Lottery, short story by Shirley Jackson, published in The New Yorker in June 1948 and included the following year in her collection The Lottery; or, The Adventures of James Harris. Much anthologized, the story is a powerful allegory of barbarism and social sacrifice.
The story recounts the events on the day of a small New England town’s annual lottery. Mr. Summers and Mr. Graves conduct the lottery drawing, a festive event that, according to nostalgic Old Man Warner, has lost some of its traditional lustre. Tessie Hutchinson is announced as the winner; she begins to protest but is silenced when the community surrounds her and stones her to death. The unemotional narrative voice underlines the horror of the final act.