Novelist Heather O'Neill on Fathers, #metoo, Class, Beauty and Roses

Published: Feb. 25, 2019, 10:30 a.m.

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HEATHER O\\u2019NEILL\\xa0is a novelist, short-story writer and essayist. Her work, which includes\\xa0Lullabies for Little Criminals,\\xa0The Girl Who Was Saturday Night and Daydreams of Angels, has\\xa0been shortlisted for the Governor General\\u2019s Literary Award for Fiction, the Orange Prize for Fiction and the Scotiabank Giller Prize in two consecutive years, and has won CBC Canada Reads, the Paragraphe Hugh MacLennan Prize for Fiction and the Danuta Gleed Award.

Born and raised in Montreal, O\\u2019Neill lives there today with her daughter. And it\'s there that I met with her to discuss her\\xa02017 CLC Kreisel Lecture published in 2018 by\\xa0The University of Alberta Press\\xa0as\\xa0Wisdom in Nonsense - Invaluable Lessons From My Father.

Among other things we talk about hating and loving your life, happiness and wonder, relationships with your parents dead and alive, memoirs versus fiction, truth, abuse and #metoo and witnesses, the legal system and power, Concordia, lying to tell the truth, editing the real world, heads being eaten off by dragons, magical radical worlds, deception versus folly, pretending, class, ignoring fathers\' advice, metaphors, loneliness, ugly babies, conventional versus internal beauty, clowns, collecting, stealing cheese, Montreal\'s Plateau neighbourhood, and roses.\\xa0

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