Edna Alford
Edna Alford (born 19 November 1947 in Turtleford, Saskatchewan) is a Canadian author and editor. As a writer she is known for the collections A Sleep Full of Dreams and The Garden of Eloise Loon. She has also won the Marian Engel Award and the Gerald Lampert Award. As an editor she co-founded the magazine Dandelion and edited fiction for Grain from 1985–1990. [1] Edna was born to George and Edith Sample and was the second eldest of the children aside from brother Stanley. She also has brothers Lorne (deased) and Gregory as well as a younger sister Beth. Edna is currently married to internationally known theoretical mathematician Richard Cushman.
Short fiction
Alford's first short story collection, A Sleep Full of Dreams, looks at the lives of residents and workers in Pine Mountain Lodge. Jeremy LaLonde describes Alford's collection as a narrative of community.[2] "On a thematic level, what distinguishes A Sleep Full of Dreams from other narratives of community is that the community it portrays (a retirement home) has rarely been depicted in a sustained way or with such stark realism," LaLonde writes.[3] He also calls the collection "exemplary in its use of imagistic links."[4]
Reviewer M.G. Osachoff noted that through the collection, Alford shows readers "that there is beauty and dignity in growing old. Avoiding sentimentality, she gives us all the unsavory details aboutold age, and yet makes us care about the old women who are Aria's (sic) patients." [5]
Alford's second collection, The Garden of Eloise Loon, deals with mental illness and apocalyptic themes. Most of the stories are set in rural Saskatchewan, and many of them in the Turtle Lake area. David Carpenter writes that Alford "usurps the quaint moderation that has been accorded to Saskatchewan by those who don't understand its hazardous otherness. The occupation of disaster, the story of loss, pain, and indignity, recites a quinitessentially Saskatchewan moment of hesitation inlaid with the exaggerated tales the province incites." "[6]
Other work
Alford is also a well-regarded literary editor. She co-edited several anthologies, including Meltwater, Rip-rap, and Intersections, published by the Banff Centre.[7] She also edited Gloria Sawai's A Song for Nettie Johnson, which won the Governor General's Award for Fiction,[8] along with short story collections by Bonnie Burnard, Fred Stenson and many others.[9]
Alford also served as associate director of the Banff Centre's Writing Studio for over a decade. During that time, she mentored several award-winning writers, including Yann Martel and Lisa Moore.[10] She also sat on Coteau Books' editorial board along with several literary juries such as the Canada Council, Saskatchewan Arts Board, and CBC's annual short fiction contest.[11]
References
- W. H. New, ed. Encyclopedia of Literature in Canada. Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 2002.
- Lalonde, Jeremy. Narrative Community in Edna Alford’s A Sleep Full of Dreams. Studies in Canadian Literature. Volume 29, Number 2 (2004).
- Osachoff, M. G.. "Intoxication". canlit.ca. Canadian Literature, 6 Feb. 2013. Web. 17 May 2015.
- Carpenter, David. The Literary History of Saskatchewan: Volume 2 - Progressions. Coteau Books, 2014.
- Author Unknown. "Edna Alford Biography." The Banff Centre. Web. 17 May 2015.
- Shea, Theresa. "Gloria Sawai: A Tribute to a writer and friend." Alberta Views, Vol 15, No 2, March 2012, pgs 38-43.
- Holmes, Gillian. Who's Who of Canadian Women: 1999-2000 University of Toronto Press, Scholarly Publishing Division; 9th annual edition edition (Aug. 1 1999).
- Aikens, Aften. "Celebrating Edna Alford’s storied career." Made in Banff: The Banff Centre Blog. May 13, 2013.
- Holmes, Gillian. Who's Who of Canadian Women: 1999-2000 University of Toronto Press, Scholarly Publishing Division; 9th annual edition edition (Aug. 1 1999).
Web sources
- ↑ Banff Centre
- ↑ Article in Studies in Canadian Literature
- ↑ Article in Studies in Canadian Literature
- ↑ Article in Studies in Canadian Literature
- ↑ Book Review in Canadian Literature
- ↑ Excerpt from The Literary History of Saskatchewan: Volume 2 Progressions
- ↑ Biography at Banff Centre
- ↑ Article in "Alberta Views
- ↑ Who's Who of Canadian Women: 1999-2000
- ↑ Post on Made in Banff: The Banff Centre Blog
- ↑ Who's Who of Canadian Women: 1999-2000
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