Often ranked with Anton Chekhov, John Cheever and a handful of others, Munro achieved stature rare for an art form traditionally placed beneath the novel.
Nobel laureate Alice Munro, the Canadian literary giant who became one of the world’s most esteemed contemporary authors and one of history’s most honored short story writers, has died at age 92.
Munro, in 2006, on a favourite walk she would take with her husband through a park along the eastern edge of Lake Huron.“I think any life can be interesting,” Munro said during a 2013 post-prize interview for the Nobel Foundation. “I think any surroundings can be interesting.” in which a housekeeper leaves her job and travels to a distant rural town to meet up with a man she believes is in love with her — unaware the romantic letters she has received were concocted by his daughter and a friend.
“I have all these disconnected realities in my own life, and I see them in other people’s lives,” she told the AP. “That was one of the problems, why I couldn’t write novels. I never saw things hanging together too well.” Isolated from the literary centre of Toronto, she did manage to get published in several literary magazines and to attract the attention of an editor at Ryerson Press . Her debut collection,, was released in 1968 with a first printing of just under 2,700 copies. A year later it won the Governor’s General Award and made Munro a national celebrity — and curiosity. “Literary Fame Catches City Mother Unprepared,” read one newspaper headline.
“Shame and embarrassment are driving forces for Munro’s characters,” Atwood wrote, “just as perfectionism in the writing has been a driving force for her: getting it down, getting it right, but also the impossibility of that.”
Australia Latest News, Australia Headlines
Similar News:You can also read news stories similar to this one that we have collected from other news sources.
Alice Munro, Nobel winner and titan of the short story, dies aged 92Acclaimed for her accounts of the darkness and desire found in everyday life, ‘the Canadian Chekhov’ has died, having suffered from dementia for more than a decade
Read more »
Chalmers is often compared to Keating but all three budgets have lacked ambitionIt is time for Chalmers to rise to the challenge and outline a reform vision.
Read more »
Country pub closures often sound death knell for small towns in regional AustraliaWhen last drinks are called at a town's only pub, it can be a body blow for the community. Sometimes it's the final blow.
Read more »
It’s not often you see an art exhibition as masterfully curated as thisPersonal identity is explored through pure poetry at the 18th Adelaide Biennial of Australian Art.
Read more »
Skeletal remains found on beach identified as woman who disappeared in 1968Mary Alice Pultz was 25 when she left with her boyfriend and was never seen again.
Read more »
2024 Budget a last chance bid at big-government intervention, whatever the costIn Lewis Carrol's 1871 novel Alice Through the Looking Glass, the White Queen promises Alice a serving of jam every other day for tuppence a week.
Read more »