From School Library Journal
Adult/High School–A worthy source of inspiration for aspiring writers. Rooke, president of PEN Canada, brings together an anthology of essays by 50 esteemed Canadian writers. Authors such as Michael Ondaatje, Yann Martel, and Marilynne Robinson relate stories and express feelings about what it means to them to be a writer. Margaret Atwood reveals that her very first novel was never published. David MacFarlane reflects on the heightened value that readers derive from interacting with authors through their work as opposed to such superficial experiences of meeting them at book signings. Alice Munro confesses that routine interruptions greatly bother her–the messiness of life's conflicting priorities even tempt her to ponder giving up her career altogether. Many of these contributors speak about the writing life with ambivalence, and yet the bottom line is that there is no other path for them. Aspiring young adult writers may also be interested in
Writing Life because of its connection to PEN Canada–a nonprofit organization that actively supports the release of imprisoned writers everywhere and promotes opportunities for exiled writers living in Canada.
–Catherine Gilbride, Farifax County Public Library, VA Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
Product Description
Since they were first published in the mid-1990s, PEN Canada’s two previous fundraising anthologies, the widely acclaimed
Writing Away and
Writing Home, have raised $200,000 in support of PEN’s vital work on behalf of free speech and writers in prison around the world. Now
Writing Life, promises to be the most successful volume yet.
In
Writing Life, fifty celebrated authors reveal surprising truths about what it means to be a writer, and about the sparks that can result when writing and life intersect — and sometimes collide. Provocative, candid, often very funny, personal, and passionately engaged, this inspired collection will take readers deep into the heart of the writing life.
Margaret Atwood revisits how she came to write five of her novels; Russell Banks reveals why he doesn’t
do research; John Berger and Michael Ondaatje discuss gate-crashing characters and the magical instant when a work begins; Joseph Boyden takes time out from promoting his first novel to go moose-hunting; Margaret Drabble considers the “wickedness” of stealing material from real life; Howard Engel describes the stroke that took away his ability to read, and where that left him as a writer; Yann Martel reflects on the impossible, necessary challenge of writing about the Holocaust; Lisa Moore shows how crucial the mess and vitality of family life are to her writing; Alice Munro shares why she might “give up” writing; Rosemary Sullivan negotiates the risks and responsibilities that come with telling the story of a life; Susan Swan wrestles with historical fact, fiction, and Casanova.
Proceeds from this volume will go to PEN Canada in support of its vital work on behalf of writers in prison around the world and in defence of freedom of expression both in Canada and abroad.
Writing Life Contributors List
André Alexis
Margaret Atwood
Russell Banks
David Bergen
John Berger
George Bowering
Marilyn Bowering
Joseph Boyden
Di Brandt
Barry Callaghan
Lynn Coady
Susan Coyne
Michael Crummey
Margaret Drabble
Bernice Eisenstein
Howard Engel
Damon Galgut
Jonathan Garfinkel
Greg Gatenby
Camilla Gibb
Charlotte Gray
Elizabeth Hay
Michael Helm
Sheila Heti
Annabel Lyon
David Macfarlane
Alistair MacLeod
Margaret MacMillan
Alberto Manguel
Yann Martel
Anne Michaels
Rohinton Mistry
Lisa Moore
Shani Mootoo
Alice Munro
Susan Musgrave
Michael Ondaatje
Anna Porter
Eden Robinson
Marilynne Robinson
Peter Robinson
John Ralston Saul
Shyam Selvadurai
Russell Smith
Rosemary Sullivan
Susan Swan
Madeleine Thien
Jane Urquhart
Michael Winter
Patricia Young