One of Canada’s greatest literary figures reflects on life at the centre of Quebec literary arts. Re-examining the influences of her early life in a large, rural Catholic family, Madeleine Gagnon not only explores her rejection of unexamined values as part of her intellectual development but also her refusal to be categorized by her gender.rnrnKarl Marx replaced Paul Claudel in Gagnon’s intellectual pantheon. Psychoanalysis gave rise to the desire to write, and her first works poured out in a torrent. She describes the friendships that played such a large part in her life and the feminist battles of the time with all their hopes, disappointments, and triumphs.rnrnThis is an account of a life well lived, told with candour, wisdom, and an inextinguishable sense of wonder.rn

As Always, A Memoir of a Life in Writing (Depuis toujours)
Translated by Phyllis Aronoff , Howard Scott
- Finalist — Cole Foundation Prize for Translation in 2015
About the book
