Books·My Life in Books

Heather O'Neill shares 6 books that fostered her love of reading

The bestselling writer is championing Catherine Leroux's The Future on Canada Reads 2024. The debates will air from March 4-7.

The bestselling writer is championing Catherine Leroux's The Future on Canada Reads 2024

A white woman with short grey hair poses in a side profile with a book. She wears blue overalls and a frilly white shirt.
Heather O'Neill champions The Future by Catherine Leroux, translated by Susan Ouriou, on Canada Reads 2024. (CBC)

The first book that Heather O'Neill remembers reading is an old book of nursery rhymes from the turn of the century. 

It was passed down through the women of her family every generation, starting with her great-grandmother, until it got to her. By the time she was four, she memorized all the nursery rhymes — and she still has it to this day. 

Now an award-winning writer of Lullabies for Little Criminals, The Girl Who Was Saturday Night, The Lonely Hearts Hotel and When We Lost Our Heads, reading is still everything to O'Neill, so much so that she's championing Catherine Leroux's The Future on Canada Reads 2024!

Ahead of the debates, she told CBC Books about the books that she holds close to her heart. 

A Season in the Life of Emmanuel by Marie-Claire Blais

A white woman with brown curly hair and eyeliner. A young boy looks up from his school book against a brown background.
A Season In The Life of Emmanuel is a book by Marie-Claire Blais. (Second Story Press, Exile Editions)

O'Neill first read A Season in the Life of Emmanuel because her dad's francophone girlfriend had a copy. Already a voracious reader, she asked to borrow it from her, but was told that it wasn't for children, which obviously made her want to read it more. 

The idea that you could come from such a milieu but want to be a philosopher and a poet was so inspiring to me.- Heather O'Neill on A Season in the Life of Emmanuel

"It was just talking about childhood in a way that wasn't available to me in children's books — all the things they wouldn't admit," she said.  

The novel follows a poverty-stricken Quebecois family in rural Quebec after their 16th child, Emmanuel, is born. The story unfolds through the lens of Emmanuel's teenage siblings, who are all rebelling against traditional family values in their own way. 

"The idea that you could come from such a milieu but want to be a philosopher and a poet was so inspiring to me."

The Theatre and its Double by Antonin Artaud

A book cover with a black and white photo of a white man against a grey background with white text.
The Theatre and its Double is a book by Antonin Artaud. (Oneworld Classics)

When O'Neill was in school, her English teacher allowed her to do an independent study. She was sent to work in "the book room" alone, where she naturally read through all of its contents.

One day, she found an old box full of books from the 1960s and 1970s about theatre theory. She promptly brought the box home and read them all, completely captivated.

I loved the idea you could talk about writing.- Heather O'Neill on The Theatre and its Double

"That was kind of the first criticism that I had come up against and I loved it," she said. "I loved the idea you could talk about writing." 

She was particularly impressed by The Theatre and its Double, a collection of essays that looked to revitalize theatre and make it accessible to all audiences. 

"Everything he was saying was so crazy, but he's just trying to get to that moment in life when you rip down the curtain and he's just trying to capture it," she said.  

A Fairly Good Time by Mavis Gallant

A white woman wearing a turtleneck rests her face on her hand in a black and white photo. A black and white image of a woman's shadow at a crosswalk.
A Fairly Good Time is a novel by Mavis Gallant. (Alison Harris, NYRB Classics)

A Fairly Good Time is a novel that centres around Shirley Perrigny, a young Canadian living in Paris. Already widowed once, with her marriage to a French journalist on the fritz, she finds herself alone and unwittingly the heroine of her own story. 

The women she meets are always in trouble, but they have the most wonderful conversations.- Heather O'Neill on A Fairly Good Time

What most stood out to O'Neill, however, were Shirley's encounters with random "crazy" women on the streets of Paris. "They lead her to all these sordid situations," she said. "The women she meets are always in trouble, but they have the most wonderful conversations."

Good Morning, Midnight by Jean Rhys

A red cover with a glass of wine and white writing on a reddish background with white text.
Good Morning, Midnight is a book by Jean Rhys. (Penguin Classics)

Set in the 1930s, Good Morning, Midnight follows a young woman who, reeling from personal tragedy, escapes to Paris to find independence.

The way she describes melancholy and sadness makes it so it's a thing of such depth and beauty.- Heather O'Neill on Good Morning, Midnight

"The way she describes melancholy and sadness makes it so it's a thing of such depth and beauty," O'Neill said. She explained that at the time the books were written, they didn't get the recognition they deserved because a woman's depression was not something people were interested in reading about. "She was so ahead of her time."

Ghost Forest by Pik-Shuen Fung

An Asian woman looks at the camera against a nature background. An abstract book cover of a face, a bird and a red flower against a yellow background.
Ghost Forest is Pik-Shuen Fung's debut novel. (pikshuen.com, Strange Light)

Although it only came out in 2021, O'Neill has already read Ghost Forest three times. The novel explores an unnamed woman's grief after her father dies. She revisits her memories of him, an "astronaut father" who stayed in Hong Kong to work when his family immigrated to Canada, and is left with unresolved questions that only her mother and grandmother can help answer. 

It's just the way she writes. It's so graceful and delicate.- Heather O'Neill on Ghost Forest

"I love an author who can stage an image," said O'Neill. "It's just the way she writes. It's so graceful and delicate."

"With each of her observations, I'm satisfied — that's beautiful enough. Usually, a book can have one or two of those moments and then she just has them all over the place."

Warlight by Michael Ondaatje

A book cover of two tiny silhouettes and the ocean. A picture of a white man with a white beard, white hair and blue eyes.
Warlight is a novel by Michael Ondaatje. (McClelland & Stewart, Getty Images)

Like many Canadian bookworms, O'Neill has a certain nostalgia for Michael Ondaatje's writing, Warlight in particular.

In Warlight, Nathaniel and Rachel's parents move to Singapore towards the end of the Second World War. The siblings are left in London with an eccentric man known as The Moth and are shaped by the strange characters that surround him. 

There's something about the way he describes childhood that I adore.- Heather O'Neill on Michael Ondaatje

"There's something about the way he describes childhood that I adore," O'Neill said. "And it's almost of another era because it gives children this agency in adulthood and sophistication that children don't get to have anymore because we kind of hover over them."

Heather O'Neill's comments have been edited for length and clarity. 

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Talia Kliot is a multimedia journalist currently working at CBC Books. She was a 2023 Joan Donaldson Scholar. You can reach her at talia.kliot@cbc.ca.

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