Alice Munro is a Canadian short-story writer who gained international recognition with her exquisitely drawn narratives. The Swedish Academy dubbed her a “master of the contemporary short story” when it awarded her the Nobel Prize for Literature in 2013. Munro’s work was noted for its precise imagery and narrative style, which is at once lyrical, compelling, economical, and intense, revealing the depth and complexities in the emotional lives of everyday people.
Munro had begun writing stories as a teenager, and she persevered in her attempt to establish herself as a writer despite years of rejection from publishers and the limitations imposed on her career by the responsibilities of marriage and motherhood. Her first collection of stories was published as Dance of the Happy Shades (1968). It is one of three of her collections—the other two being Who Do You Think You Are? (1978; also published as The Beggar Maid: Stories of Flo and Rose) and The Progress of Love (1986)—awarded the annual Governor General’s Literary Award for fiction. Lives of Girls and Women (1971) was conceived as a novel but developed into a series of interrelated coming-of-age stories. Like much of her fiction, the tales capture the social and cultural milieu of her native southwestern Ontario. Munro embraced the mystery, intimacy, and tension of the ordinary lives of both men and women, rooted in the uncharted and ambivalent landscape of what affectionately came to be known as “Munro country.”
Her later volumes included Something I’ve Been Meaning to Tell You (1974), The Moons of Jupiter (1982), Friend of My Youth (1990), A Wilderness Station (1994), and The Love of a Good Woman (1998). The latter volume received both Canada’s esteemed Giller Prize (later the Scotiabank Giller Prize) and the National Book Critics Circle Award in the U.S. Her book Open Secrets (1994) contains stories that range in setting from the semicivilized hills of southern Ontario to the mountains of Albania. In Runaway (2004) Munro explores the depths of ordinary lives through the use of temporal shifts and realistically rendered reminiscences; it also was awarded the Giller Prize. The View from Castle Rock (2007) combines history, family memoir, and fiction into narratives of questionable inquiries and obscure replies. In 2009 Munro won the Man Booker International Prize; that same year she published the short-story collection Too Much Happiness.
Like much of her oeuvre, the stories in Dear Life (2012) were unified by examinations of sex, love, and death. Four of the stories in the collection were explicitly framed as fictionalized autobiography meant to encapsulate the aging Munro’s feelings about her life. She told an interviewer that Dear Life, her 14th collection, would be her last. She issued several compilations of previously published material, including Selected Stories (1996) and Family Furnishings: Selected Stories, 1995–2014 (2014).
Munro’s short story about the domestic erosions of Alzheimer’s disease, “The Bear Came over the Mountain,” originally published in Hateship, Friendship, Courtship, Loveship, Marriage (2001), was made into the critically acclaimed film Away from Her (2006), directed by Sarah Polley and starring Julie Christie and Michael Murphy. Other film adaptations of Munro’s work included Hateship Loveship (2013), which was based on the title story of her 2001 collection, and Pedro Almodóvar’s Julieta (2016), a mystery-drama inspired by several stories in Runaway.
Information sourced from Britannica
The matchless Munro makes art out of everyday lives in this exquisite short story collection
Runaway
Chance
Soon
Silence
Passion
Trespasses
Tricks
Powers
The incomparable Alice Munro’s bestselling and rapturously acclaimed Runaway is a book of extraordinary stories about love and its infinite betrayals and surprises, from the title story about a young woman who, though she thinks she wants to, is incapable of leaving her husband, to three stories about a woman named Juliet and the emotions that complicate the luster of her intimate relationships. Here are men and women of wildly different times and circumstances, their lives made vividly palpable by the nuance and empathy of Munro's writing. Runaway is about the power and betrayals of love, about lost children, lost chances. There is pain and desolation beneath the surface, like a needle in the heart, which makes these stories more powerful and compelling than anything she has written before.
In Munro’s hands, the people she writes about–women of all ages and circumstances, and their friends, lovers, parents, and children–become as vivid as our own neighbours. It is her miraculous gift to make these stories as real and unforgettable as our own. (back cover)
Winner of the Man Booker International Prize 2009 and the Winner of the Nobel Prize in Literature 2013
“The thing about life, Harry had told Lauren, was to live in the world with interest. To keep your eyes open and see the possibilities - see the humanity - in everybody you met. To be aware. If he had anything at all to teach her it was that. Be aware.” - Runaway by Alice Munro