In Just a Little One, Dorothy Parker distills a lifetime of wit, despair, and defiance into a single, unsteady cocktailhour monologue. A woman, armed with charm and selfdeprecation, insists she’s “not really drinking”, as her voice wavers between irony and heartbreak. Beneath the sparkling surface of repartee, Parker exposes the loneliness of modern urban life and the tragicomedy of selfawareness. This miniature masterpiece captures her gift for compressing a social world—its manners, hypocrisies, and private humiliations—into a single, devastating confession.
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