Joan Barfoot

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Joan Louise Barfoot (born May 17, 1946) is a Canadian

Man Booker Prize
. Her latest novel, Exit Lines, was published in 2009.

Life and career

Joan Barfoot was born on May 17, 1946, in

London Free Press.[1] As a child, while she and her mother watched a squirrel in their back yard from their kitchen, her mother told Barfoot to tell her the squirrel's story and she'd write it down. Barfoot doesn't remember the story but remembers her delight when her mother read the story back to her and the power of creating it.[citation needed] Barfoot was also encouraged to write by a teacher who told Barfoot she wrote well and to consider some word-related career. In addition to writing Barfoot occasionally teaches creative writing classes though she believes writing ought to be an entirely private pleasure and a puzzle.[2] She lives in London, Ontario
.

In 1986, her second novel, Dancing in the Dark (1982), became a film of the same name, starring Martha Henry. It won three Genie Awards, including Best Art Direction, Best Adapted Screenplay, and Best Performance by an Actress in a Leading Role. Dancing in the Dark is a novel about the reflection of a criminally insane woman who is serving time in prison for the murder of her unfaithful husband. She explains her reasoning for the murder throughout the novel while looking for psychological freedom.[citation needed]

Barfoot's work has been compared internationally with that of Anne Tyler, Carol Shields, Margaret Drabble, Fay Weldon and Margaret Atwood.[3]

Barfoot's first novel to win an award was Abra. Abra is about a young mother who abandons her home, husband and children and moves to the Canadian Wilderness.[citation needed]

In 1992, she won the

Marian Engel Award, presented each year by the Writers' Trust of Canada
to a female Canadian novelist who is in the middle of her career.

Critical commentary

In 2005, the Giller jury committee, describing Luck, wrote that "Joan Barfoot is at the peak of her powers with this splendidly realized tragicomedy about a household in the wake of an unexpected death. With its note-perfect narration, mordant wit and wonderfully neurotic cast of characters, Luck shows how death can reveal life in all its absurdity and complexity. This scintillating comedy of manners is also a profound meditation on fate, love, and artifice."[4]

Prizes and honours

  • 1978 Books in Canada First Novel Award, for Abra
  • 1992
    Marian Engel Award
  • 2001 Shortlist, Trillium Book Award, for Critical Injuries
  • 2002 Longlist,
    Man Booker Prize
    , for Critical Injuries
  • 2005 Nominee,
    Scotiabank Giller Prize
    , for Luck
  • 2005 Huron University College medal of distinction

Bibliography

  • Abra (1978) (UK title: Gaining Ground) McGraw-Hill Ryerson
  • Dancing in the Dark (1982) Macmillan of Canada
  • Duet for Three (1985)
  • Family News (1989)
  • Plain Jane (1992)
  • Charlotte and Claudia Keeping in Touch (1994)
  • Some Things About Flying (1997) Key Porter Books
  • Getting Over Edgar (1999) Key Porter Books
  • Critical Injuries (2001) Key Porter Books
  • Luck (2005) Alfred Knopf Canada
  • Exit Lines (2009) Alfred Knopf Canada

References

  1. ^ Canadian Books & Authors web site
  2. ^ "An Interview with Joan Barfoot". Archived from the original on 2012-01-27. Retrieved 2010-11-04.
  3. ^ Author web site
  4. ^ "Bookclubs.ca web site". Archived from the original on 2011-07-25. Retrieved 2010-09-23.