“Labor Day Dinner” Alice Munro

2014-03-20T20:06:29-04:00

Reflecting a fictional timeline into the reader's world adds another layer of credibility to the tale. It's that much easier to imagine the characters in "Labor Day Dinner" taking shape, when you're reading it as Labour Day weekend approaches. Structurally, the story is complex, although at first glance it is

“Labor Day Dinner” Alice Munro2014-03-20T20:06:29-04:00

“Prue” Alice Munro

2014-03-20T20:06:24-04:00

I wish that I could introduce the narrator of the last story, "Bardon Bus", to Prue. I like to imagine them sitting together in a cozy neighbourhood bar -- nothing fancy, rather the sort of bar to which people go to be heard rather than to be seen -- in

“Prue” Alice Munro2014-03-20T20:06:24-04:00

“Accident” Alice Munro

2014-03-20T20:06:12-04:00

"Frances is loitering by a second-floor window of the high school in Hanratty, on an afternoon in early December. It is 1943." Loitering: it's a significant word. There is something unsanctioned about her presence there. And, yet, she is a high-school teacher. But she has no business being on the

“Accident” Alice Munro2014-03-20T20:06:12-04:00

“The Turkey Season” Alice Munro

2014-03-20T20:05:12-04:00

Whether it's Alva's job in a summer resort in "Sunday Afternoon" or Edie looking after the kids and doing what needs doing in "How I Met My Husband", Alice Munro captures the twinned knowingness and vulnerability of a girl in her first job. Few other authors (Alissa York would be

“The Turkey Season” Alice Munro2014-03-20T20:05:12-04:00

“Dulse” Alice Munro

2014-03-20T20:06:49-04:00

Originally published almost exactly 32 years ago, the events depicted in "Dulse" could have taken place 32 years prior and will, likely, still ring true 32 years hence. Lydia is a woman alone, not freshly alone -- for she has been divorced for nine years -- but self-consciously alone. Something

“Dulse” Alice Munro2014-03-20T20:06:49-04:00
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