Alice Munro - who just received the Madowell Medal - gets the small-paper-profile treatment courtesy of the Concord Monitor.
Munro's protagonists are frequently women, and Barber noted that they often live in the period from the 1930s to the '80s. Many exist within the strictures of their time. When they break with convention, it is on an intensely personal scale. The main characters are acted upon by forces other than themselves - other characters, distance, chance. Objects and relationships fall out of use.
Munro often starts her pieces with a straightforward sentence that belies the nuanced story that unfolds beneath it: "Lionel told them how his mother had died.""In the summer of 1979, I walked into the kitchen of my friend Sunny's house near Uxbridge, Ontario, and saw a man standing at the counter, making himself a ketchup sandwich."
So painfully obvious that the small paper writer had not heard of Munro before and probably was also a stranger to lit fict. Yikes.
Posted by: MJ | August 15, 2006 at 09:50 AM