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Alice Munro is a Canadian writer who was dubbed a "master of the contemporary short story" when she was awarded the Nobel Prize in Literature in 2013. She is the recipient of many other literary accolades, including the 2009 Man Booker International Prize for lifetime achievement and is a three-time winner of the Governor General's Award, Canada's highest literary honour. Much of Munro's work is set in Canada and concerns the lives of everyday people.

The British Council's directory of writers describes her work as follows: "One Alice Munro short story has the power of many novels. Nothing is wasted. Nothing is irrelevant. Every word glows. Munro is able to capture the shape and mood, the flavour of a life in 30 pages. She is wholly without cliché... Munro has talked about ‘the complexity of things, the things within things’. She teases the surface, until all that is hidden, all those tucked away pivots of a life, are revealed..."

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This is a series of occasional meetups to discuss Alice Munro's short stories (picking up from where we left off before the pandemic).

This time we will discuss “Wood” (2009), a story about Roy, a man who obsesses over woodcutting. One version of this story was published in 1980, but Munro completely re-wrote it for her 2009 collection Too Much Happiness.

Please read the story in advance (around 25 pages). A pdf copy is available here.

Stories by Munro we've previously discussed in this group:

Related topics

Art
Literature
Nature
Short Stories
Carpentry

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