Мы в Telegram
Добавить новость





160*600

Новости сегодня на DirectAdvert

Новости сегодня от Adwile

Актуальные новости сегодня от ValueImpression.com


Опубликовать свою новость бесплатно - сейчас


<
>

Nobel literature winner Alice Munro, revered as short story master, dies at 92

Nobel literature winner Alice Munro, revered as short story master, dies at 92

Nobel laureate Alice Munro has died. The Canadian literary giant who became one of the world’s most renowned contemporary authors was 92, officials say.

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.

A spokesperson for publisher Penguin Random House Canada said Munro, winner of the Nobel literary prize in 2013, died Monday at home in Port Hope, Ontario. Munro had been in frail health for years and often spoke of retirement, a decision that proved final after the author's 2012 collection, "Dear Life."

Often ranked with Anton Chekhov, John Cheever and a handful of other short story writers, Munro achieved stature rare for an art form traditionally placed beneath the novel. She was the first lifelong Canadian to win the Nobel and the first recipient cited exclusively for short fiction. Echoing the judgment of so many before, the Swedish academy pronounced her a "master of the contemporary short story" who could "accommodate the entire epic complexity of the novel in just a few short pages."

AMERICAN AUTHOR PAUL AUSTER, KNOWN FOR 'THE NEW YORK TRILOGY,' DIES AT 77

Munro, little known beyond Canada until her late 30s, also became one of the few short story writers to enjoy ongoing commercial success. Sales in North America alone exceeded 1 million copies and the Nobel announcement raised "Dear Life" to the high end of The New York Times' bestseller list for paperback fiction. Other popular books included "Too Much Happiness," "The View from Castle Rock" and "The Love of a Good Woman."

Over a half century of writing, Munro perfected one of the greatest tricks of any art form: illuminating the universal through the particular, creating stories set around Canada that appealed to readers far away. She produced no single definitive work, but dozens of classics that were showcases of wisdom, technique and talent — her inspired plot twists and artful shifts of time and perspective; her subtle, sometimes cutting humor; her summation of lives in broad dimension and fine detail; her insights into people across age or background, her genius for sketching a character, like the adulterous woman introduced as "short, cushiony, dark-eyed, effusive. A stranger to irony."

Her best known fiction included "The Beggar's Maid," a courtship between an insecure young woman and an officious rich boy who becomes her husband; "Corrie," in which a wealthy young woman has an affair with an architect "equipped with a wife and young family"; and "The Moons of Jupiter," about a middle-aged writer who visits her ailing father in a Toronto hospital and shares memories of different parts of their lives.

"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."

CORMAC MCCARTHY, PULITZER PRIZE-WINNING AUTHOR OF 'THE ROAD,' DEAD AT 89

Disliking Munro, as a writer or as a person, seemed almost heretical. The wide and welcoming smile captured in her author photographs was complemented by a down-to-earth manner and eyes of acute alertness, fitting for a woman who seemed to pull stories out of the air the way songwriters discovered melodies. She was admired without apparent envy, placed by the likes of Jonathan Franzen, John Updike and Cynthia Ozick at the very top of the pantheon. Munro's daughter, Sheila Munro, wrote a memoir in which she confided that "so unassailable is the truth of her fiction that sometimes I even feel as though I'm living inside an Alice Munro story." Fellow Canadian author Margaret Atwood called her a pioneer for women, and for Canadians.

"Back in the 1950s and 60s, when Munro began, there was a feeling that not only female writers but Canadians were thought to be both trespassing and transgressing," Atwood wrote in a 2013 tribute published in the Guardian after Munro won the Nobel. "The road to the Nobel wasn't an easy one for Munro: the odds that a literary star would emerge from her time and place would once have been zero."

Although not overtly political, Munro witnessed and participated in the cultural revolution of the 1960s and '70s and permitted her characters to do the same. She was a farmer's daughter who married young, then left her husband in the 1970s and took to "wearing miniskirts and prancing around," as she recalled during a 2003 interview with The Associated Press. Many of her stories contrasted the generation of Munro's parents with the more open-ended lives of their children, departing from the years when housewives daydreamed "between the walls that the husband was paying for."

Moviegoers would become familiar with "The Bear Came Over the Mountain," the improbably seamless tale of a married woman with memory loss who has an affair with a fellow nursing home patient, a story further complicated by her husband's many past infidelities. "The Bear" was adapted by director Sarah Polley into the feature film "Away from Her," which brought an Academy Award nomination for Julie Christie. In 2014, Kristen Wiig starred in "Hateship, Loveship," an adaptation of the story "Hateship, Friendship, Courtship, Loveship, Marriage," 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.

Even before the Nobel, Munro received honors from around the English-language world, including Britain's Man Booker International Prize and the National Book Critics Circle award in the U.S., where the American Academy of Arts and Letters voted her in as an honorary member. In Canada, she was a three-time winner of the Governor General's Award and a two-time winner of the Giller Prize.

Munro was a short story writer by choice, and, apparently, by design. Judith Jones, an editor at Alfred A. Knopf who worked with Updike and Anne Tyler, did not want to publish "Lives of Girls & Women," her only novel, writing in an internal memo that "there's no question the lady can write but it's also clear she is primarily a short story writer."

Munro would acknowledge that she didn't think like a novelist.

"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."

Alice Ann Laidlaw was born in Wingham, Ontario, in 1931, and spent much of her childhood there, a time and place she often used in her fiction, including the four autobiographical pieces that concluded "Dear Life." Her father was a fox farmer, her mother a teacher and the family’s fortunes shifted between middle class and working poor, giving the future author a special sensitivity to money and class. Young Alice was often absorbed in literature, starting with the first time she was read Hans Christian Andersen’s "The Little Mermaid." She was a compulsive inventor of stories and the "sort of child who reads walking upstairs and props a book in front of her when she does the dishes."

A top student in high school, she received a scholarship to study at the University of Western Ontario, majoring in journalism as a "cover-up" for her pursuit of literature. She was still an undergraduate when she sold a story about a lonely teacher, "The Dimensions of a Shadow," to CBC Radio. She was also publishing work in her school’s literary journal.

One fellow student read "Dimensions" and wrote to the then-Laidlaw, telling her the story reminded him of Chekhov. The student, Gerald Fremlin, would become her second husband. Another fellow student, James Munro, was her first husband. They married in 1951, when she was only 20, and had four children, one of whom died soon after birth.

Settling with her family in Vancouver, Alice Munro wrote between trips to school, housework and helping her husband at the bookstore that they co-owned and would turn up in some of her stories. She wrote one book in the laundry room of her house, her typewriter placed near the washer and dryer. Flannery O’Connor, Carson McCullers and other writers from the American South inspired her, through their sense of place and their understanding of the strange and absurd.

Isolated from the literary center of Toronto, she did manage to get published in several literary magazines and to attract the attention of an editor at Ryerson Press (later bought out by McGraw Hill). Her debut collection, "Dance of the Happy Shades," 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.

"When the book first came they sent me a half dozen copies. I put them in the closet. I didn’t look at them. I didn’t tell my husband they had come, because I couldn’t bear it. I was afraid it was terrible," Munro told the AP. "And one night, he was away, and I forced myself to sit down and read it all the way through, and I didn’t think it was too bad. And I felt I could acknowledge it and it would be OK."

By the early ’70s, she had left her husband, later observing that she was not "prepared to be a submissive wife." Her changing life was best illustrated by her response to the annual Canadian census. For years, she had written down her occupation as "housewife." In 1971, she switched to "writer."

Over the next 40 years, her reputation and readership only grew, with many of her stories first appearing in The New Yorker. Her prose style was straightforward, her tone matter of fact, but her plots revealed unending disruption and disappointments: broken marriages, violent deaths, madness and dreams unfulfilled, or never even attempted. "Canadian Gothic" was one way she described the community of her childhood, a world she returned to when, in middle age, she and her second husband relocated to nearby Clinton.

"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."

She had the kind of curiosity that would have made her an ideal companion on a long train ride, imagining the lives of the other passengers. Munro wrote the story "Friend of My Youth," in which a man has an affair with his fiancee’s sister and ends up living with both women, after an acquaintance told her about some neighbors who belonged to a religion that forbade card games. The author wanted to know more — about the religion, about the neighbors.

Even as a child, Munro had regarded the world as an adventure and mystery and herself as an observer, walking around Wingham and taking in the homes as if she were a tourist. In "The Peace of Utrecht," an autobiographical story written in the late 1960s, a woman discovers an old high school notebook and remembers a dance she once attended with an intensity that would envelop her whole existence.

"And now an experience which seemed not at all memorable at the time," Munro wrote, "had been transformed into something curiously meaningful for me, and complete; it took in more than the girls dancing and the single street, it spread over the whole town, its rudimentary pattern of streets and its bare trees and muddy yards just free of the snow, over the dirt roads where the lights of cars appeared, jolting toward the town, under an immense pale wash of sky."

Читайте на 123ru.net

Другие проекты от 123ru.net



Архангельск

Ученые Президентской академии в Санкт-Петербурге разработали способ повышения экологичности целлюлозно-бумажной промышленности



Мир

Россиянам озвучили цены на отдых в Крыму, которые приятно удивили




Українські новини

ОіБ - охорона і безпека: замовляй охорону в Харькові



Новости 24 часа

Компания ICDMC приняла участие в торжественном открытии выставки “Тульское качество”



Game News

Today's Wordle answer for Sunday, May 26



Москва

Эксперт сенсационно раскрыл загадку Мессинга и Жириновского.



News Every Day

Man City star James McAtee lined up for dream Champions League transfer after Sheffield United relegation



Блоги

Маленьким пациентам центра трансплантологии рассказали о тех, кто спасает их жизни каждый день



Москва

В Москве 1 июня стартует чемпионат по игре «Камень, ножницы, бумага»



Ольга Бузова

«Можно даже не уметь играть в футбол»: Ольга Бузова публично высмеяла и унизила бывшего мужа Дмитрия Тарасова



Москва

В Москве 1 июня стартует чемпионат по игре «Камень, ножницы, бумага»



Дарья Касаткина

Касаткина о романе Синнера и Калинской: рада, больше ничего не хочу говорить



Москва

«СВЯТОЙ ЛЕНИН» спасает население от борьбы с перенаселением, 3 серия, СЕРЬЁЗНЫЙ НОВОСТНОЙ СЕРИАЛ.



Михаил Кутушов

Компания ICDMC приняла участие в торжественном открытии выставки “Тульское качество”



Симферополь

Сожалеют, что бросающих черепах не бросили в тюрьму



Москва

«СВЯТОЙ ЛЕНИН» спасает население от борьбы с перенаселением, 3 серия, СЕРЬЁЗНЫЙ НОВОСТНОЙ СЕРИАЛ.



Москва

Собянин: На городском вокзале Зеленоград — Крюково появился еще один переход



Москва

В исторических парках покажут любимые мультфильмы от СТС Kids ко Дню защиты детей



Другие популярные новости дня сегодня


123ru.net — быстрее, чем Я..., самые свежие и актуальные новости Вашего города — каждый день, каждый час с ежеминутным обновлением! Мгновенная публикация на языке оригинала, без модерации и без купюр в разделе Пользователи сайта 123ru.net.

Как добавить свои новости в наши трансляции? Очень просто. Достаточно отправить заявку на наш электронный адрес mail@29ru.net с указанием адреса Вашей ленты новостей в формате RSS или подать заявку на включение Вашего сайта в наш каталог через форму. После модерации заявки в течении 24 часов Ваша лента новостей начнёт транслироваться в разделе Вашего города. Все новости в нашей ленте новостей отсортированы поминутно по времени публикации, которое указано напротив каждой новости справа также как и прямая ссылка на источник информации. Если у Вас есть интересные фото Вашего города или других населённых пунктов Вашего региона мы также готовы опубликовать их в разделе Вашего города в нашем каталоге региональных сайтов, который на сегодняшний день является самым большим региональным ресурсом, охватывающим все города не только России и Украины, но ещё и Белоруссии и Абхазии. Прислать фото можно здесь. Оперативно разместить свою новость в Вашем городе можно самостоятельно через форму.



Новости 24/7 Все города России




Загрузка...


Топ 10 новостей последнего часа






Персональные новости

123ru.net — ежедневник главных новостей Вашего города и Вашего региона. 123ru.net - новости в деталях, свежий, незамыленный образ событий дня, аналитика минувших событий, прогнозы на будущее и непредвзятый взгляд на настоящее, как всегда, оперативно, честно, без купюр и цензуры каждый час, семь дней в неделю, 24 часа в сутки. Ещё больше местных городских новостей Вашего города — на порталах News-Life.pro и News24.pro. Полная лента региональных новостей на этот час — здесь. Самые свежие и популярные публикации событий в России и в мире сегодня - в ТОП-100 и на сайте Russia24.pro. С 2017 года проект 123ru.net стал мультиязычным и расширил свою аудиторию в мировом пространстве. Теперь нас читает не только русскоязычная аудитория и жители бывшего СССР, но и весь современный мир. 123ru.net - мир новостей без границ и цензуры в режиме реального времени. Каждую минуту - 123 самые горячие новости из городов и регионов. С нами Вы никогда не пропустите главное. А самым главным во все века остаётся "время" - наше и Ваше (у каждого - оно своё). Время - бесценно! Берегите и цените время. Здесь и сейчас — знакомства на 123ru.net. . Разместить свою новость локально в любом городе (и даже, на любом языке мира) можно ежесекундно (совершенно бесплатно) с мгновенной публикацией (без цензуры и модерации) самостоятельно - здесь.



Загрузка...

Загрузка...

Экология в России и мире
Москва

Проверку начали после загрязнения реки Сетунь в Москве





Путин в России и мире
Москва

Создать комфортные условия для исследований и обучения


Лукашенко в Беларуси и мире



123ru.netмеждународная интерактивная информационная сеть (ежеминутные новости с ежедневным интелектуальным архивом). Только у нас — все главные новости дня без политической цензуры. "123 Новости" — абсолютно все точки зрения, трезвая аналитика, цивилизованные споры и обсуждения без взаимных обвинений и оскорблений. Помните, что не у всех точка зрения совпадает с Вашей. Уважайте мнение других, даже если Вы отстаиваете свой взгляд и свою позицию. Smi24.net — облегчённая версия старейшего обозревателя новостей 123ru.net.

Мы не навязываем Вам своё видение, мы даём Вам объективный срез событий дня без цензуры и без купюр. Новости, какие они есть — онлайн (с поминутным архивом по всем городам и регионам России, Украины, Белоруссии и Абхазии).

123ru.net — живые новости в прямом эфире!

В любую минуту Вы можете добавить свою новость мгновенно — здесь.





Зеленский в Украине и мире
Киев

Белый дом признал причастность к выработке «формулы мира» Киева


Навальный в России и мире
Москва

Раз нет протестов, будут санкции: как навальнисты и команда Ходорковского меняют стратегию борьбы с Россией



Здоровье в России и мире


Частные объявления в Вашем городе, в Вашем регионе и в России






Загрузка...

Загрузка...



Антонина Арталевская

Маленьким пациентам центра трансплантологии рассказали о тех, кто спасает их жизни каждый день



Москва

Террористы из «Крокуса» не смогут выплатить компенсации пострадавшим

Друзья 123ru.net


Информационные партнёры 123ru.net



Спонсоры 123ru.net