About this item
Highlights
- Newly discovered work by one of Canada's favourite writers The Canadian Shields brings together fifty short writings by Carol Shields (1935-2003), including more than two dozen previously unpublished short stories and essays and two dozen essays previously published but never before collected.
- Author(s): Carol Shields
- 336 Pages
- Literary Collections, Canadian
Description
About the Book
The Canadian Shields brings together fifty short writings by Carol Shields, including more than two dozen previously unpublished short stories and essays. Invaluable to scholars and admirers of Shields's work, the writings presented to the public here for the first time vividly illuminate the chapters of Shields's writing life.
Book Synopsis
Newly discovered work by one of Canada's favourite writers
The Canadian Shields brings together fifty short writings by Carol Shields (1935-2003), including more than two dozen previously unpublished short stories and essays and two dozen essays previously published but never before collected. Invaluable to scholars and admirers of Shields's work, the writings discovered in the National Library Archives by Nora Foster Stovel and presented to the public here for the first time reflect Shields's interest in the relationships between reality and fiction, mothers and daughters, and gender and genre. They also reveal her love of Canada, especially Winnipeg, her home for twenty years. Originally written for women's magazines, travel journals, convocation addresses, and even graduate school term papers, Shields's imaginative essays explore ideas about home, Canadian literature, contemporary women's writing, and the future of fiction. Whether autobiographical, cultural, or feminist in focus, these works vividly illuminate the multiple chapters of Shields's writing life.
Margaret Atwood and Lorna Crozier frame Shields's texts with tributes to her work and impact. An introduction by Stovel situates Shields as a Canadian author and subversive feminist writer, demonstrating how American-born-and-raised Carol Anne Warner became "the Canadian Shields"--a quintessential and beloved Canadian writer and the only author to win both the Pulitzer Prize and the Governor General's Gold Medal for Fiction.
Review Quotes
"There are some real insights here, small portals opened into this writer's creative process and principles... A reader can learn a lot in these pages, too, about women writers who have been forgotten and about what it was like to be writing novels when almost no novels by Canadians were being published and when women were expected to write about the perfect baked potato and how to edge a knitted top with shell crochet."--Merilyn Simonds "Canadian Writers Abroad"
"Editor Nora Foster Stovel has done us all a service by digging out the many short gems of wisdom, wit and honesty that mark the life of this wonderfully observant and sensitive writer."--Ron Verzuh "The British Columbia Review"
"I found myself making pages and pages of notes while I was making my way through this collection. I kept stumbling upon passages I knew I'd want to return to again and again. Shields has so many noteworthy things to say about reading, writing, and the value of women's stories."--Ann Douglas "The Honest Talk"
"The Canadian Shields [is] enjoyable and satisfying for both the leisurely reader and the serious academic."
--Dave Williamson "Winnipeg Free Press"