Friend of My Youth
Friend of My Youth is a book of short stories by Alice Munro, published by McClelland and Stewart in 1990. It won the 1990 Trillium Book Award.[1]
Stories
- "Friend of My Youth"
- "Five Points"
- "Meneseteung"
- "Hold Me Fast, Don't Let Me Pass"
- "Oranges and Apples"
- "Pictures of the Ice"
- "Goodness and Mercy"
- "Oh, What Avails"
- "Differently"
- "Wigtime"
"Friend of My Youth"
"Friend of My Youth," the title story, largely consists of a reminiscence of the narrator a family, particularly one sister, Flora, that her now-deceased mother boarded with before her marriage.
"Five Points"
"Five Points," the second story, is about a married woman, Brenda, in Ontario having an affair. Her boyfriend, Neil, tells her about a confectionery he frequented his youth in Victoria, British Columbia, and its owners.
Literature
- Lynn Blin, Alice Munro’s Naughty Coordinators in “Friend of My Youth”, in: Journal of the Short Story in English (JSSE)/Les cahiers de la nouvelle, ISSN 0294-0442, n° 55 (Autumn 2010), Special issue: The Short Stories of Alice Munro.
- Deborah Heller, Getting Loose: Women and Narration in Alice Munro's Friend of my Youth, in: The rest of the story. Critical essays on Alice Munro, edited by Robert Thacker, ECW Press, Toronto 1999, ISBN 1-55022-392-5, pp. 60–80.
References
- Kirchhoff, H. J. (April 17, 1991). "Friend of My Youth takes $10,000: Munro wins Trillium", The Globe and Mail, p. C1.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.