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A List
11/14/05
ST. LAWRENCE PROFESSOR WRITES LANDMARK BOOK ON ALICE MUNRO
CANTON - A new biography of acclaimed author Alice Munro, by St. Lawrence University
Professor of Canadian Studies and Molson Research Fellow Robert W. Thacker, is the
first such volume that has received Munro's cooperation.
Alice Munro: Writing Her Lives was published November 12 by McClelland & Stewart Ltd.,
Toronto, who calls it "the book about one of the world's great authors, which shows
how her life and her stories intertwine."
Thacker will speak about the book at a reception held by the Friends of Owen D.
Young and Launders Libraries celebrating its publication, on Friday, December 2,
at 4 p.m. in the Josephine Young Room of Owen D. Young Library. The event is open
to the public, free of charge.
The publishers state, "For almost 30 years, Thacker has been researching this book,
steeping himself in Munro's life and work, working with her cooperation to make it
complete. The result is a feast of information for Alice Munro's admirers everywhere.
By following 'the parallel tracks' of Munro's life and Munro's texts, he gives a
thorough and revealing account of both her life and work."
A faculty member at St. Lawrence since 1983, Thacker is a graduate of Bowling Green
State University. He earned a master's degree from the University of Waterloo -
writing his thesis on Munro - and the Ph.D. from the University of Manitoba. He is
an expert on Canadian culture, especially literature, and has written extensively on
the work of Munro, Willa Cather, and the North American literary west.
Thacker is the editor of The Rest of the Story: Critical Essays on Alice Munro (1999).
He received the 2003 Edith and Delbert Wylder Award from the Western Literature
Association and is a former editor of The American Review of Canadian Studies.
Thacker was awarded a grant from the Canadian Embassy in Washington, D.C., to support
research on the Munro biography, as well as the Molson Fellowship, funded by a gift
from Eric Molson, chairman of Molson Inc., and his wife, Jane Molson, of Montreal,
through the Lincolnshire Foundation.
Widely regarded as among the best contemporary writers of short stories in English, Munro
has published a novel, Lives of Girls and Women (1971), and the short-story collections
Dance of the Happy Shades (1968); Something I've Been Meaning to Tell You (1976); Who Do
You Think You Are? (1978; U.S. and U.K., The Beggar Maid); The Moons of Jupiter (1982);
The Progress of Love (1986); Friend of My Youth (1990); Open Secrets (1994); The Love of
a Good Woman (1998); Hateship, Friendship, Courtship, Loveship, Marriage (2001); Vintage
Munro (2004); and Runaway (2004). Since the 1970s, Munro's stories have been frequently
printed in periodicals such as The Paris Review, Atlantic Monthly and, especially, The
New Yorker, which has itself published well over 40 of them.
A review of Alice Munro: Writing Her Lives in the December Quill & Quire states that
Thacker provides "an extraordinary wealth of detail on Munro's progress as a
writer," and that he "brings together much illustrating commentary on what Munro does
and how she does it."
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