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Bonnie Burnard (1945–2017)

Author of A Good House

9+ Works 788 Members 20 Reviews 1 Favorited

About the Author

Bonnie Burnard was born in Southwestern Ontario. She has been writer-in-residence at the University of Western Ontario, taught at both Sage Hill and the Humber School of Writing, and was a jury panel member for the Giller Prize. She has read from her work throughout Canada and in the U.S., Europe, show more Australia and South Africa. Burnard's stories have been included in many anthologies, among them: Stories by Canadian Women, published in 1999; Mothers and Daughters, published in 1997; The Arnold Anthology of Post-Colonial Literature, published in 1996; Spin on 2, published in 1995; The Oxford Book of Canadian Short Stories, published in 1995; and Best Canadian Stories, published in 1992 and 1989. She won the Giller Prize, for A Good House in 1999, the Marian Engel Award for body of work in 1995 and the Periodical Publishers Award, for Casino in 1994. She was shortlisted for the Giller Prize, and won the Saskatchewan Book of the Year, both for Casino in 1994 and alson won the Commonwealth Best Book Award, for Women of Influence in 1989. (Bowker Author Biography) show less
Image credit: canadianauthors.net

Works by Bonnie Burnard

A Good House (1999) 665 copies, 16 reviews
Suddenly (2009) 51 copies, 1 review
Casino & Other Stories (1994) 45 copies, 2 reviews
Women of Influence (1988) 17 copies, 1 review
Una Casa Buena (2001) 3 copies
Stag Line: Stories by Men (1995) — Editor — 1 copy
Casa De Família (2001) 1 copy

Associated Works

Dropped Threads: What We Aren't Told (2001) — Contributor — 296 copies, 2 reviews
The New Oxford Book of Canadian Short Stories (1986) — Contributor — 79 copies, 1 review
Mothers and Daughters: An Anthology (1998) — Contributor — 34 copies, 1 review
The Oxford Book of Stories by Canadian Women in English (1999) — Contributor — 31 copies

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Canonical name
Burnard, Bonnie
Birthdate
1945-01-15
Date of death
2017-03-04
Gender
female
Occupations
academic
novelist
Awards and honors
Marian Engel Award (1995)
Nationality
Canada
Birthplace
Petrolia, Ontario, Canada
Places of residence
Forest, Ontario, Canada
London, Ontario, Canada
Regina, Saskatchewan, Canada
Associated Place (for map)
Ontario, Canada

Members

Reviews

21 reviews
I hadn't read any of Bonnie Burnard's work before this. I think this was probably a Library Thing recommendation based on my high ratings of books by Canadian authors such as Carol Shields, Elizabeth Hay, Miriam Toews, Alice Munro, Joan Barfoot, and nearly-Canadian Beth Powning. Burnard is, however, not in the same class as this group, in my opinion. I did like her slow, understated style, but I felt I didn't get to know her characters as much as I would have liked. The essential underlying show more story was well told and worth telling. Of course, being in a 'second tier' of Canadian women authors still puts her way above a lot of her peers! show less
½
A Good House tells the story of the Chambers family from 1949 through 1997, and follows the waves of their births, deaths, marriages, and divorces. It is set in a fictional small town northwest of London, Ontario toward Lake Huron, but could really be set in any small town in North America. Just substitute "going off to university," with "going off to college," and "Muskoka chair" with "Adirondack chair," and the book could be set in the US.

What I enjoyed most about this novel was Burnard's show more unique writing style where she packs a wealth of information in each sentence, and then packs her paragraphs with these full sentences. In doing this, she creates nuanced, rounded characters and tells a story without a lot of action. What she achieves on the page reminds me of the folk art landscape painting where every element is given equal weight and importance. And like folk art painting, Burnard's book is interesting and worthwhile, but it's not fabulously sophisticated high art either. However, it was good enough to win the 1999 Giller Prize, and that says something.

Recommended for: I think this would appeal to the reader who enjoys books by Carol Shields and that sort. I loved Burnard's packed sentences, but others might find them tedious. It is an impressive first novel.
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This book is set in Stonebrook, Ontario. It begins just after WWII, and the book ends in the year of 1997. The book is a family history of the Chambers family-their lives, loves, births, weddings, divorces and deaths. That's a lot to cover especially when the family is a large and gregarious one. But Ms. Burnard does an admirable job of this. This book was the 1999 winner of the prestigious Giller Prize and I think it was a well-deserved honour. Her writing style is deceptively simple, but show more the character development of this large cast of characters is remarkable. The book covers all sorts of family events and catastrophies, but does it in such an understated style. It is not often that an author can achieve such a complete job of character development within one book. It usually takes a series to achieve this. But Ms. Burnard accomplishes this difficult task with aplomb. These characters live and breathe. The book paints a very rich and complex picture of human nature and human foibles indeed. show less
This is a book I enjoy re-reading. Everytime it comes back to me after being loaned to a friend, I sit down to read the first chapter and I get hooked.

A Good House follows a Canadian family over 5 decades - checking in every five-8 years or so, like the film series Seven Up. A husband comes home from the war. Kids grow up, mothers die, fathers remarry and new bavies come. college, grandchildren, divorce, love affairs. Wedding dinners by a lake. Wakes and funerals. Everything and nothing, but show more described thoughfully, deeply. Not pretentious or ponderous, it just kind of is. Like life. show less

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Statistics

Works
9
Also by
5
Members
788
Popularity
#32,299
Rating
½ 3.7
Reviews
20
ISBNs
40
Languages
7
Favorited
1

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