Stig Östlund

söndag, oktober 13, 2013

Alice Munro



  

Novellen "The bear came over the mountain" av årets av nobelpristagare i litteratur Alice Munro har filmats med Julie Christie och Grant Anderson. Härovan en trailer.

Alice Munro föddes 1932 i Wingham, Ontario


Alice Munro
Snygg gammal tant

Så många lovord från alla möjliga håll som Alice Munro fått efter tillkännagivandet  om nobelpriset "måste" man (Du) läsa åtminstone något av Munros alster. Själv har jag på Sundsvalls Stadsbibliotek (det var förvånansvärt inga problem, jag kunde hämta den dagen efter pris-tillkännagivandet) lånat  "Brinnande livet". Jag brukar f.ö. alltid låna nobelpristagares böcker strax efter vi fått veta att de fått priset. Ibland har jag inte läst ut boken (exempelvis  Elfriede Jelinek)
Wislawa Szymborska
(1923-2012)
Nobelpris 1996

ibland har jag "slukat" den (exempelvis Wisława Szymborska) för att nu fortsätta tala om kvinnliga pristagare).
Munros bok har jag börjat att läsa; jag tror att jag får stor behållning av den och fortsätter med någon annan av henne.
Att Munro kommer från Canada gör inte saken sämre; tvärtom, det är ett land där jag varit relativt mycket, både i väster och i öster vars "yttersidor" jag har fäst mig mycket vid. Det var också ganska nära att jag skulle blivit kvar där, närmare bestämt på Vancouver Island, British Colombia (där f.ö. Munro har ett hus).  Orsaken var en flicka som jag fortfarande har kontakt med, Carol, en flicka, nu gammal tant av Munrotyp ;)

Victoria ligger som synes allra sydligaste  av Vancouver Island. "Min" tant Carol bor numera
på fastlandet i Powell River som synes på kartan.
Mina fartygsresor gick till Port Alberni där det luktade lika mycket trä som i gamla Sundsvallsdistriktet. Nära Seattle (USA) som syns på kartan bodde en avlägsen släkting till mig. I Nanaimo, södra Vancouver Island, föddes jazzsångerskan/världsstjärnan Dianna Krall etc




För att inte tala om staden Vancouver:



The Vancouver Sun
In its announcement, the Swedish Academy lauded Ontario-born Munro, 82, as a "master of the contemporary short story."
Munro, who became the 110th Nobel laureate in literature and only the 13th woman to receive the distinction, was in Victoria when word went about her prestigious win.
The typically media-shy literary star gave few interviews, but told The Canadian Press she never thought she would win.
"It's really very wonderful," she said.
Jim Munro, who turned 84 on Thursday, was full praise as he stood inside Munro's Books, the iconic 50-year-old downtown Victoria bookstore, which he and Alice started together.
"One time, working in the store, she said, 'I can write better than these people,' so from then on she quit the store and stayed home and wrote," he said.
Jim Munro said her greatest gift as a writer is her constant ability to make her stories immediately believable and her characters real.
"She's always had that skill," he said. "Extremely observant. Very meticulous, very good with dialogue. With a short story you have to make a person seem real very quickly and she does that."
At Munro's Books, staff were changing front-window displays to highlight Munro's award and put the spotlight on her latest collection of short stories, "Dear Life." A guest book was left at the front counter for people to write notes of congratulations to Munro.
Jim Munro said Alice Munro was in the store recently for a book signing.
"She's quite frail," he said. "Certainly not up for TV interviews."
Jim Munro said he spoke to his former wife about her Nobel prize.
"She's pretty well bowled over by it," he said. "But I'm not surprised because I've seen other people who have won the award and her writing is certainly on the quality."
Victoria resident Kyla Graham arrived at Munro's Books shortly after it opened and bought several copies of "Dear Life."
She said she was planning to give the books as gifts, including one for her sister, an aspiring writer.
"It's exciting there's a local connection as well with Munro's Books and the fact they started the bookstore here 50 years ago," she said.
While the esteemed prize is certainly the highest peak of the literary award landscape, Munro is no stranger to accolades.
She has previously won the Man Booker International Prize for her entire body of work, as well as two Scotiabank Giller Prizes (for 1998's ``The Love of a Good Woman'' and 2004's ``Runaway''), three Governor General's Literary Awards (for her 1968 debut ``Dance of the Happy Shades,'' 1978's ``Who Do You Think You Are?'' and 1986's ``The Progress of Love''), the Commonwealth Writers' Prize, the inaugural Marian Engel Award and the American National Book Critics Circle Award.
When she won the Man Booker International in 2009, prize judge chairwoman Jane Smiley noted that "the surface of Alice Munro's works, its simplicity and quiet appearance, is a deceptive thing, that beneath that surface is a store of insight, a body of observation, and a world of wisdom that is close to addictive.''









Alices förste make Jim Munroe. I bakgrunden den bokhandel som Alice Munro öppnade 1969 i Victoria (Vancouver Island) tillsammans med sin förste man.
 

OBS SVT2 ikväll kl 20:00:
programmet "Babel" kommer att ägna mycket (mycken?) tid åt Alice Munro

Bloggarkiv