Alice Munro on the craft of writing short stories | CBC - Action News
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Alice Munro on the craft of writing short stories

Alice Munro talks to Midday host Tina Srebotnjak about the craft of writing fiction.

Interview with author offers a rare glimpse at her approach to writing

Alice Munro on the craft of writing

34 years ago
Duration 4:13
Alice Munro talks to Midday host Tina Srebotnjak about the craft of writing fiction. Aired July 5, 1990.

Alice Munro made a rare public appearance in 1990 at the Red Barn Theatre in Jackson's Point, Ont., to read fromFriend of My Youth, then her most recent collection of short stories.

The celebrated short story author also sat down for an interview, another relatively rare occurrence.

'That was my experience'

Midday host Tina Srebotnjak's first question recalled one of her earlier books, Lives of Girls and Women, and how well female readers relate to her writing.

As we hear in the excerpt below, Munro says she doesn't think about writing the stories of other women, but in fact "the surprise is when people come up and say 'that was my experience.'"

Alice Munro on writing about girls and women

34 years ago
Duration 4:28
Alice Munro talks about relating the lives she writes about to her own.

They discuss her dislike for talking about her craft, and she explains that she thinks a lot about her writing, and feels uncomfortable speaking aboutit in an academic way.

Srebotnjakasks if she worries about losing the gift. But Munro explains that's not the way she looks at things.

"No, because I don't think of it as a gift I think of it as work I do," Munro says.

Acclaimed throughout her career

Friend of My Youth is Munro's seventh volume of short stories.Her first, Dance of the Happy Shades, was published in 1968 and won the Governor General's Award for Literature.

Asked about what she's writing now, Munro describes her upcoming work as "a book that will probably be long stories"and talks about doing "more historical things."

In 2006, her short story The Bear Came over the Mountain was adapted and made into the critically acclaimed film Away from Her by Canadian director Sarah Polley.

The spine of Alice Munro's Dear Life is shown in this 2013 image. (Chad Hipolito/Canadian Press)

In 2012, the short story collection Dear Life was published, andthe next year Munroannounced she was retiring from writing. She was awarded the 2013 Nobel Prize for Literature, and cited as "master of the contemporary short story."