Audrey Thomas's fiction is largely and conspicuously autobiographical. It tends to be woman-centered, although sometimes Thomas adopts a male persona. Her work is often thought of as experimental, mai...
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Critical Essay by Anne Montagnes
Audrey Thomas has made her bondage as daughter into an entire book [Songs My Mother Taught Me]. It is justifiable to describe it as Thomas' bondage, not that o...
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Critical Essay by Karen Mulhallen
Songs My Mother Taught Me takes its title from a sentimental Victorian drawing room ballad. This seems appropriate for a portrait of a battered but charming adolesce...
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Critical Essay by George Bowering
Stories written by Audrey Thomas tell about things happening to one, & the condition of that one, a person very much alone in the world. She is a child alone in ...
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Critical Essay by B. Godard
The ostensible subject matter of Audrey Thomas' book is familiar to her readers. Like many of her short stories, Blown Figures explores the blurred edges of sanity ...
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Stephens is a Canadian educator, critic, and editor for the journal Canadian Literature. In the following review of Ten Green Bottles, he lauds Thomas as an exemplary practitioner of the short story.
...
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In the following review of The Wild Blue Yonder, Scanlan notes Thomas's ability to capture intimate and sometimes painful moments in human relationships.
Five years ago someone asked Audrey ...
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In the following review, Barnwell praises The Wild Blue Yonder, observing that Thomas expertly portrays women made cynical by the brutality of the male arena.
Audrey Thomas's latest collecti...
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In the following review, Corbeil lauds Thomas's aptitude for making her stories fresh and new.
There is very little formal experimentation, and zero posturing in Audrey Thomas's lates...
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In the following essay, Quigley analyzes Thomas's depiction of men in her fiction, as well as her use of a wide variety of ethnicities in her secondary characters.
Probably more than one rev...
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Harvor is a Canadian educator, poet, and fiction writer. In the following review, she voices a mixed opinion of Graven Images, finding the novel's collage style superficial but praising Thomas&...
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In the following review, Guth finds Graven Images challenging and complex, but somewhat inscrutable for the reader.
Audrey Thomas' Graven Images is primarily a novel about writing, about the...
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Ricou is a Canadian writer and educator. In the following review, Ricou assesses The Wild Blue Yonder, concluding that Thomas's wordplay creates in her stories tension, irony, and at times unpa...
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Tiger is a Canadian writer, educator, and broadcaster. In the following essay, she analyzes Thomas's autobiographical construction of her characters' memories and its effect on her defin...
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In the following review, Horton concludes that while Coming Down from Wa lacks drama, Thomas's evocative imagery makes the novel compelling.
Audrey Thomas's Coming Down from Wa begins...
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In the following review, Van Luven praises Thomas's exploration of new themes and subject matter in Coming Down from Wa, but finds the novel "not wholly satisfying."
A mystery ...
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A Canadian educator and critic who has published editions of works by Charlotte and Anne Brontë, Rosengarten served as an editor for the journal Canadian Literature from 1977 to 1986. In the fo...
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Grady is the editor of The Penguin Book of Canadian Short Stories (1980), The Penguin Book of Modern Canadian Short Stories (1982), and the journal Books in Canada. In the following essay, he examines...
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In the following essay, Thomas discusses her fascination with words and language.
My study is on the second floor of our house and faces East. I like that and I get up early to write, perhaps not s...
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In the following essay, Butling argues that Thomas's use of autobiographical details in her short stories allows her to create female characters who are more "real" than those of ...
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In the following essay, Howells examines Thomas's story endings in Real Mothers, noting that their indefiniteness signals the still-unexplored territory in modern women's lives of revisi...
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In the following essay, Thesen recounts teaching the story "Aquarius" to college freshmen, revealing to them the distrust they should have of the story's narrator, a disgruntled h...
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Garebian is an India-born Canadian writer and educator. In the following review of Goodbye Harold, Good Luck, he praises Thomas as a keenly sensual writer.
In her introduction to this collection of...
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In the following essay, Dorscht explores Thomas's interpretation of the notion of self as it is depicted in language.
Blank pages, comic strips, quotations, jokes, dreams, rhymes, newspaper ...
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Stephens is a Canadian educator, critic, and an editor for the journal Canadian Literature. In the following review of Ten Green Bottles, he lauds Thomas as an exemplary practitioner of the short stor...
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A Canadian poet, educator, and critic, Davey has exerted significant influence on contemporary Canadian literature as the editor of the journal Tish. Davey has stated: "The writing I value unma...
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In the following excerpt from a review of Goodbye Harold, Good Luck, Yanofsky finds Thomas's talent for depicting poignant moments well suited to the short story form.
[In Goodbye Harold, Go...
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In the following review, Hatch identifies strengths and weaknesses in the collection Goodbye, Harold, Good Luck.
In the introduction to her new collection of short stories, Goodbye Harold, Good Luc...
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In the following review, Fee contends that Thomas 's best fiction in Goodbye Harold, Good Luck combines traditional subjects with subtle experimental techniques.
[In Goodbye Harold, Good Luc...
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In the following review, Mackay praises Thomas's presentation of emotionally scarred women in The Wild Blue Yonder.
Pointing out his own romantic shortcomings, a husband in one of Audrey Tho...
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In the following review of The Wild Blue Yonder, Hussein observes that Thomas treats "the seemingly insignificant texture of our lives. "
Described by Margaret Atwood as one of Canada...
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Quigley is an editor for the journal Essays on Canadian Writing and ECW Press, where she works on the Canadian Writers and Their Works series. In the following essay, she studies The Wild Blue Yonder ...
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In the following review, Ricou identifies characteristics of the narratives of The Wild Blue Yonder.
Audrey Thomas's typical form emerges in [The Wild Blue Yonder] as the sketch engagé/...
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I Canadian educator and critic who has published editions of works by Charlotte and Anne Brontë, Rosengarten served as an editor for the journal Canadian Literature from 1977 to 1986. In the foll...
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Internationally acclaimed as a poet, novelist, and short story writer, Atwood is a major figure in Canadian letters. She has helped to define and identify the goals of contemporary Canadian literature...
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A commentator on the arts, Wachtel has worked as a writer, broadcaster, and host of radio programs produced by the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation. In addition, she has edited two works about domest...
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Grady is the editor of The Penguin Book of Canadian Short Stories (1980), The Penguin Book of Modern Canadian Short Stories (1982), and the journal Books in Canada. In the following essay, he states t...
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In the following review, Godard explores the relationships of language and narrative to meaning in Real Mothers.
Any doubt as to whether Thomas is one of our major writers should be dispelled in th...
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In the following essay, Thomas discusses her fascination with words and language.
My study is on the second floor of our house and faces East. I like that and I get up early to write, perhaps not ...
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In the following interview, which was conducted in August, 1985, Thomas discusses her literary themes and interests and biographical influences on her writing.
[Wachtel]: You describe your own chil...
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A leading Canadian experimental writer, Bowering devises inventive literary forms and techniques to explore themes related to art, language, and identity. His preoccupation with art and language is te...
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