The Ontario stories range from "A Wilderness Station" which gives an account of an 1852 tree-felling accident and sheds light on the harsh life of the pioneers, all the way to the present, where family names known to us appear again in a world of TV shows and snowmobiles. The letter sweeps us away into a world of secrets and revelations where nothing - not even a courtship by letter that leads, over time, to a solid marriage - is as it originally seems. "Perhaps you will be surprised to hear from a person you don't know and that doesn’t remember your name." These intriguing words begin a letter dated 1917 to the Librarian in Carstairs, Ontario (the heart of "Alice Munro Country"). All of them provide compulsive reading – and rewarding re-reading. Open Secrets, Alice Munro's eighth book, consists of eight matchless stories, each one as rich as a full novel.
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