Mavis Gallant’s “Bernadette”

2017-07-14T15:29:31-04:00

Alice Munro's hired girls like to read too.In "Sunday Afternoon", Alva asks Mr. Gannett if she could borrow "King Lear" and, also, Stendhal's The Red and the Black. Mr. Gannett agrees to share his books with Alva, just as Mr. Montjoy gifts the young Alice with his copy of Seven Gothic Tales at the end of

Mavis Gallant’s “Bernadette”2017-07-14T15:29:31-04:00

Mazo de la Roche’s Mary Wakefield (1949)

2020-06-01T07:48:19-04:00

There were “few openings for women in the nineties” and, so, Mary Wakefield is forced to consider work as a governess in the 1890s. She is fortunate, in fact, that Ernest Whiteoak is seeking a governess for his brother’s young son (nine years old) and daughter (seven years old). Their mother

Mazo de la Roche’s Mary Wakefield (1949)2020-06-01T07:48:19-04:00

Mavis Gallant’s “Acceptance of Their Ways”

2017-07-14T15:26:58-04:00

As is fitting for the opening story of Mavis Gallant's second published collection, My Heart is Broken, many themes feel familiar. The question of what constitutes a "good" woman, particularly when she is not a wife. The dilemma of trying to live an interesting life while maintaining a sheen of

Mavis Gallant’s “Acceptance of Their Ways”2017-07-14T15:26:58-04:00
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