Winnipeg Free Press (Newspaper) - September 3, 2015, Winnipeg, Manitoba C M Y K PAGE C12
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A LMOST all of Armin Wiebe’s idiosyncratic
Mennonite novels and plays began
life as short stories.
So it is somewhat ironic that after a 37- year
writing career — during which he has been
applauded for his humorous 1984 breakthrough
novel T he Salvation of Yasch Siemens and his
romantic folk play The Moonlight Sonata of
Beethoven Blatz — the Winnipegger is celebrating
the publication of his first collection of short
stories, called Armin’s Shorts ( Turnstone Press).
“ What seems to happen is
that I write a short story and
it wants to grow,” says Wiebe,
a 67- year- old retired schoolteacher.
“ You start with
something small.”
One of the 25 pieces from
his new 300- page book, to be
launched 7 p. m. Thursday,
Sept. 3 at McNally Robinson
Booksellers, was first
published in 1978. Included
are also a couple of Yasch
Siemens stories that weren’t
written in time to be worked
into the popular novel about
the quirky inhabitants of the
fictional Mennonite community
of Gutenthal.
“ The Salvation of Yasch
Siemens originally was
meant to be a collection of
short stories,” Wiebe says
during an interview this
week. “ They were linked, but
I had never thought of them
as a novel. When ( writer)
David Arnason told me they
would work better as a novel,
I started thinking of myself
as a novelist.”
That designation didn’t
stop him from penning a new
short story, which grew into
Murder in Gutenthal and
later into The Second Coming of Yeeat Shpanst .
It was a hilarious story called And Besides
God Made Poison Ivy that became the basis for
his debut stage work, The Moonlight Sonata of
Beethoven Blatz, which premièred at Theatre
Projects Manitoba in 2011.
Wiebe had been wanting to gather his best
“ little fictions,” as he calls his stories, many of
which had been published decades ago in obscure
publications. Occasionally, he would read
a portion of one for a public event, after which
audience members would badger him to find out
what happened. The Altona- born Wiebe thought
there was value in having all his stories in one
book.
“ I hope that people will see the growth of a
writer,” says the 1979 University of Manitoba
graduate. “ I see the similarities and the differences
of my early writing and how some of the
concerns have endured.”
One of the new pieces features Yasch Siemens’
wife, Oata, going to the Winnipeg Fringe Theatre
Festival for the first time in 1994, the year the
city was abuzz about posters of a controversial
show, the title of which featured an unprintable
term for female genitalia.
His last published work was
his fourth novel, Tatsea, which
won the 2004 McNally Robinson
Book of the Year and the
Margaret Laurence Award for
Fiction. It is his only work that
wasn’t born as a short story.
Wiebe says he is not particularly
unique in having his plots
require more development
than a short story can offer.
He once read American author
William Faulkner’s short stories
and saw all the beginnings
of his famous novels.
“ Maybe people who read
Armin’s Shorts will say those
aren’t short stories, they are
parts of novels,” he says with
a laugh.
The publication of writing
that spans his entire career
does spur an author to take
stock of his literary achievement.
“ Four novels, one play and
one collection of short stories
is a pretty meagre output
over 30 years,” says Wiebe,
who taught creative writing
at Red River College for 12
years, until 2008. “ I see myself
as a footnote in the Manitoba
writing community. In the long
run, that’s probably what it
will be.”
He is most proud that he was part of the group
that, in 1981, established the Manitoba Writers’
Guild, an organization that supported the careers
of such local prominent writers as Miriam
Toews, David Bergen, Sandra Birdsell, Jake
MacDonald and Patrick Friesen.
“ I was there when it all started. I feel that it
is something that has paid off for writers and
readers.”
kevin. prokosh@ freepress. mb. ca
By Kevin Prokosh
To make
a short story
long...
Local author’s novels were all born of smaller works
up town WINNIPEG FREE PRESS œ THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 3, 2015 12
¥
books
BOO K LAUNCH
Armin Wiebe
ARMIN’S SHORTS
œ Sept. 3, 7 p. m.
œ McNally Robinson Booksellers
LYNNE MARTIN PHOTO
ARMIN WIEBE
C_ 12_ Sep- 03- 15_ FP_ 01. indd C12 9/ 2/ 15 5: 35: 37 PM