Sunday, October 13, 2013

Canadian Author Alice Munro Wins Nobel Prize

 photo imagesqtbnANd9GcT03jWQIC3oRrbMgPQBr.jpg

Author Alice Munro, famous for her sharp, witty short stories, has won the Nobel Prize for Literature.

From the CBC
Alice Munro wins the 2013 Nobel Prize in Literature, becoming the first Canadian woman to take the award since its launch in 1901.

Munro, 82, only the 13th woman given the award, was lauded by the Swedish Academy during the Nobel announcement in Stockholm as the "master of the contemporary short story."

. . . Munro's stories focus on striking portraits of women living in small-town Ontario. They revolve around small epiphanies encountered by her characters, often when current events illuminate something that happened in the past.

"Her work is very provincial in that it's based in small towns and rural parts of Canada for the most part. At the same time, what she does with the characters in those places is show us their universality, their humanity." New Yorker magazine fiction editor Deborah Treisman, who has edited Munro's short stories for more than a decade, told Jian Ghomeshi on CBC's Q cultural affairs show.

"She takes a specific case and makes it feel so universal."

Alice Munro Archive Available at University of Canada

USA Today: Alice Munro Essential Reading List