From: Fiona Kidman
A new book by
Canadian writer Alice Munro is always a cause for celebration. Her publications
span the past forty-five years. Each time one appears, roughly every three
years, it is hard to believe that it will be as good as what has gone before.
But at eighty-one years of age, Munro has delivered Dear Life¸ another
collection of short stories that astound with their wisdom and insights into
the human condition, the mysterious working of the heart, the way love rewards
and bewilders her characters.
These fourteen stories come with a
difference from previous collections. The last four are not quite stories, she
tells us, for they are autobiographical, in her words ‘the first and last – and
the closest – things I have to say about my own life.’ This section is called
“Finale” and from this we must take it that she is bidding some kind of
farewell.
Do these four stories surprise us then? Yes and no. Throughout them
runs the narrative thread that has illuminated so many of her stories from the
past: growing up in rural Ontario, the daughter of a silver fox fur farmer who
loses his money and a mother who would like a better station in life, but
succumbs early to Parkinson’s Disease, the revelation of sexual secrets, the
shameful beatings she received for misbehaviour from her father. All of these
elements have appeared before, particularly the beatings, but until this story,
they were administered by someone else; for instance, in The Beggar Maid, by
the narrator’s stepmother. But here, she says, this is the unvarnished truth,
it was my father who beat me, he thought it for the best, and I don’t hold it
against him. These personal stories end in her childhood. What are we to make
of this? The coded message would appear that if the reader can find this Alice
in stories of childhood, it is reasonable to assume that it is the same grown
up Alice who informs us in stories about an older and more worldly narrator.
Read the stories – that is where you will find me.
Some of the earlier ten stories show unevenness in their structure,
although none fail to draw the reader on and surprise. Memory is the key to
each of them, the story of what went before, the place where our history takes
us. My favourite three stories are “Corrie”, “Train” and the title story “Dear
Life”. “Corrie” is a plain woman
deceived by her lover, for most of her life. She pays a monetary price for
keeping a secret that in fact never existed, a story invented by the man to
extract regular money from her. If there
is a surprise, it is that Corrie, the character, old and ready to abandon sex,
still sees it as money well spent. There
may be a price of one kind or another for love, but what would life have been
without it at all? “Train” is a sympathetic account of a young man returning
from World War 11 and never making it home. He jumps the train before he
reaches his destination and drifts through a series of relationships before
moving on. The dénouement, in which we discover why he didn’t return, makes perfect
sense of what has gone before.
And so to the title and final story “Dear Life”. Alice, for this is
the autobiographical writer narrating, is an infant in her pram, outside the
house where the family lives, when a woman with a reputation for strangeness
approaches. The mother snatches the baby, runs inside and locks the door, while
the demented woman knocks and bangs at the windows. Finally she goes away. When
she is an old woman herself, the narrator discovers that the woman had once
lived in the house and was perhaps looking for a past that she had forgotten at
the time. One can never know everything all at once, she is saying. Nor could
she, herself, have recognized as a girl, that the mother who had embarrassed
and driven her away as her illness progressed, was the same woman who had
protected and loved her. She understands now. ‘We say of some things,’ she
concludes, ‘that they can’t be forgiven, or that we will never forgive
ourselves. But we do –we do it all the time.’
I am grateful for Munro’s own dear, sweet life, the stories she has
given us, and the simple stark beauty of her language. This doesn’t have to be
the end, but if it is, it is a beautiful conclusion.
Dear Life, by Alice Munro, Chatto & Windus 2012
Footnote:
The Paris newspaper Liberation commissioned twenty foreign writers to write short appraisals of their favourite books for 2012. The contributors included John Burnside, Salman Rushdie, Hideo Furukawa and Thomas Jonigk. The English version of mine is attached. For your French speaking followers who might like to see this special edition in full, the link is:http://www.liberation.fr/livres/2012/12/19
Footnote:
The Paris newspaper Liberation commissioned twenty foreign writers to write short appraisals of their favourite books for 2012. The contributors included John Burnside, Salman Rushdie, Hideo Furukawa and Thomas Jonigk. The English version of mine is attached. For your French speaking followers who might like to see this special edition in full, the link is:http://www.liberation.fr/livres/2012/12/19
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