• Dhaka Sat, 06 JULY 2024,
logo

Alice Munro, Nobel Prize Winning Writer, Dies at 92

Rtv news

  14 May 2024, 23:27

Munro was the acclaimed author of short story collections like ‘The Love of a Good Woman’ and ‘Dear Life’

Alice Munro, Nobel Prize-winning writer best known for her short stories, has died. She was 92.

Munro's family confirmed the author's death to The Globe and Mail on May 13. Munro had suffered from dementia for over 10 years, and died at her Ontario care home.

Munro was born in Ontario, Canada in 1931. Her father, Robert Eric Laidlow, was a fox farmer and her mother, Anne Clarke Laidlaw, was a schoolteacher. Munro was the eldest of three children, and had a younger brother, born in 1936, and a younger sister born in 1937. She was an avid reader as a child, and cited writers like Eudora Welty, Carson McCullers and Flannery O'Connor as influences.

Munro began writing fiction as a teenager, publishing her first short story in 1950, before attending the University of Western Ontario to study English and journalism. She often drew from her own background for inspiration, featuring elements like her father's fox farm and her mother's Parkinson's disease in her writing.

"One is lucky to be born in a place where no one is doing it because then you can say, well obviously I can write better than everyone else in high school," Munro told The Guardian in 2013 about being a writer from her hometown. "You have no idea of the competition."

Munro published her first short story collection, Dance of the Happy Shades, in 1968, which won Canada’s highest literary prize, the Governor General’s Award. Her 1978 collection, Who Do You Think You Are? also won the prize that year. In later years, Munro published the short story collections The Love of a Good Woman (1998), Runaway (2004) and Dear Life (2012), among others.

The author's work was considered revolutionary for the short story canon. Munro's writing tended to incorporate jumps in time, her native Ontario and a focus on relationships. Many of her stories also centered on girls coming of age, such as 1964's "Boys and Girls," about a young girl's examination of gender roles both in and outside the home.

“For years and years I thought that stories were just practice, till I got time to write a novel. Then I found that they were all I could do, and so I faced that," Munro told The New Yorker of her writing in 2012. "I suppose that my trying to get so much into stories has been a compensation."

Dear Life, one of her most notable collections, was comprised of stories that Munro wrote over the course of her lifetime, and earned her the 2013 Nobel Prize in Literature.

Source: People

Comments

  • Most Viewed News Of Entertainment
Read More
Executioner Shahjahan dies
Kuwait fire: India brings back bodies of 45 workers
Israeli airstrikes, Dead bodies lying on the road in Al-Aqsa Hospital area
Germany floods: Firefighter dies during rescue in Bavaria