“It's
a fantastic privilege to spend three or four hundred pages with a reader. You
have time to go into certain questions that are painful or difficult or
complicated. That's one thing that appeals to me very much about the novel form”
– Anne Michaels
Born in Toronto, Canada on this date
in 1958, Michaels is an award-winning poet and novelist whose work has been
translated and published in over 45 countries. Her books have won myriad
international awards including the Orange Prize the Guardian Fiction Prize, the
Lannan Award for Fiction, and the Commonwealth Poetry Prize for the Americas.
Both a graduate of and writing teacher
at Toronto University, Michaels said she knew she wanted to be a writer from a
very young age. “I started to write
things down as a very young child,” she said,
“wanting to find a way to remember - to keep close, somehow - moments
that made an impression on me.”
After starting her career in poetry,
she turned her creative juices toward novels starting with Fugitive Pieces. The book established Michaels’ long-running
style of exploring the relationship between history and memory, and how people
remember. This remarkable work on The
Holocaust won an equally remarkable basketful of awards – a dozen international
prizes in all and was adapted into a feature film.
“Hold a book in your hand,” Michaels
said, “and you’re a pilgrim at the gates of a new city.”
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Moment with a friend at http://writersmoment.blogspot.com
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