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How Should a Person Be? by Sheila Heti
How Should a Person Be? by Sheila Heti









How Should a Person Be? by Sheila Heti

The demands of fiction notwithstanding, however, the novel can’t have been an easy read for him at times (in a recent essay he writes of the intensity of being “sampled” in the service of art). Wilson, who also has a bit part in Teenager Hamlet, has been a stalwart public supporter of his ex. The novel begins in the aftermath of the dissolution of Sheila’s marriage to her husband, who in real life is the music critic and author Carl Wilson. The book and the film were in fact launched together along with an album by the musician and poet Ryan Kamstra, who completes the trinity with by appearing in all three works. The two also collaborated on Williamson’s recent film, Teenager Hamlet. Large passages are made up of transcribed conversations and emails between Heti and her artist friends, including, most significantly, the painter Margaux Williamson. It may be suspiciously close, however, to a roman à clef. It’s easy to get lost in the meta-ness of it all and imagine also that the wide critical acclaim Heti received for her first two books, the short story collection The Middle Stories and the novel Ticknor, which effectively declared her the Future of Interesting Writing in Canada, added to the pressure of producing this novel.Īlthough the protagonist of How Should A Person Be? is someone called Sheila Heti, the author has indicated that it contains enough fiction to stop it being a memoir. Sheila Heti’s latest does its best to flout, sometimes lavishly, standard definitions of plot, character and form - plus fiction versus reality.īut at the heart of this flouting is a theme almost sweetly banal in its simplicity: writer’s block, in this case a malady brought on by Heti’s attempts to fulfill a commission to write a play. (For perspective, I'm a math major though I write in my free time, I'd hardly consider anything I work on important, let alone "world-changing" as Sheila in the novel puts it.How should a novel be? Despite centuries of prodding and experimentation, most people still have fairly entrenched opinions about this. I see the characters as such ridiculous figures, spending no real time working and calling leisure work. I cannot connect with this book in any meaningful way, certainly not enough to write a paper on it. There are chapters about her cocaine-fueled nights and her inability to finish her play, which she sees as a really big deal. My question is, what is the purpose to this book? Her thoughts seem so pretentious and self-important, while her actions are submissive and traditional (think "interlude for fucking", primarily). The book, in a sentence, is a fictional semi-biography exploring the life of Sheila, a young playwright, and her friends and peers.

How Should a Person Be? by Sheila Heti

Hi guys, so for a seminar class in college I was assigned to read the book "How Should a Person Be?" by Sheila Heti.











How Should a Person Be? by Sheila Heti