“Home” Alice Munro

2017-07-25T11:24:12-04:00

McClelland & Stewart, 2006 Alice's father has remarried, and Irlma has made many changes in the house. "Irlma is a stout and rosy woman, with tinted butterscotch curls, brown eyes in which there is still a sparkle, a look of emotional readiness, of being always on the brink

“Home” Alice Munro2017-07-25T11:24:12-04:00

“Lying Under the Apple Tree” Alice Munro

2017-07-25T11:26:36-04:00

Whether and how a girl rode a bicycle mattered a great deal in the 1950s in southwestern Ontario, for the young Alice Munro. 2006; Vintage, 2007 "We lived just beyond the town limits, so if I showed up riding a bicycle—and particularly this bicycle—it would put me in

“Lying Under the Apple Tree” Alice Munro2017-07-25T11:26:36-04:00

“Fathers” Alice Munro

2017-07-25T11:25:29-04:00

For readers familiar with Alice Munro's most recent collection, Dear Life, the title of this story will immediately recall "Night", which she described as being "not quite" a story about her relationship with her father. Vintage, 2006 "Night" is part of a group of four tales, which she feels are

“Fathers” Alice Munro2017-07-25T11:25:29-04:00

“Working for a Living” Alice Munro

2017-07-25T11:24:22-04:00

Many of the themes which resurface in Alice Munro's fiction play an important role in "Working for a Living". 2006; Vintage, 2008 One of the first which strikes readers is the question of town versus country, which plays such a predominant role in both Lives of Girls and

“Working for a Living” Alice Munro2017-07-25T11:24:22-04:00

“The View from Castle Rock” Alice Munro

2017-07-25T11:27:20-04:00

The title story in this collection follows "No Advantages" closely. It presents Old James the father, Andrew, Walter, and their sister Mary, Andrew’s wife Agnes, and Agnes and Andrew’s son James,"under two years old", and recounts their experiences from "the harbor of Leith, on the 4th of June, 1818, [when] they set

“The View from Castle Rock” Alice Munro2017-07-25T11:27:20-04:00
Go to Top