Alistair MacLeod: Essays on His WorksIrene Guilford Guernica Editions, 2001 - 128 páginas Including personal interviews, background information, and criticism, this collection of essays examines renowned Canadian author Alistair MacLeod's life and the writing of his novel No Great Mischief. Various literary critics explore themes present in his work such as memory versus myth and the blending of history. One of the chief contemporary fiction writers, MacLeod has won such honors as the Dartmouth Book Award for Fiction, the Raddall Award for Fiction, and the Trillium Award for Fiction. |
Contenido
11 | 51 |
Lighthouse Ring and Fountain by Karl E Jirgens | 84 |
ReSourcing the Historical Present by Colin | 95 |
Alligators in the Sewers by Douglas Gibson | 125 |
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Términos y frases comunes
Alexander MacDonald Alexander's Alistair MacLeod become Birds Bring boat brother Calum Calgary called Calum MacDonald Canada Canadian Canna Cape Breton Celtic ring chapter clan Clan Donald clann Chalum Ruaidh cousin Culloden death Elliot Lake English exile father Fern Picard fiction fishing frame narration Gaelic speakers Gift of Blood Grandpa Grey Dog hear Highland Highland clearances Highway imagined island Jane Urquhart Janice Kulyk Keefer kind labour Lament language legend lives look Lost Salt Gift MacLeod's novel McClelland & Stewart Meoble miners mining Mischief Moidart myth narrative narrator's never never-ending circle Nova Scotia Ontario oral culture oral memory orthodontist parents past Prebble Quebec reader recall Scotland Scottish sense Shelagh Rogers singing sister songs speak summer tale talk tell things tion told Toronto Trillium Award Vision voice W. O. Mitchell Windsor Wolfe writing