The Icelandic Canadian - 01.06.1995, Síða 25

The Icelandic Canadian - 01.06.1995, Síða 25
SPRING / SUMMER 1995 THE ICELANDIC CANADIAN 135 My Amma Lives in the Woods An interview with Betty Jane Wylie by Agnes Bardal Comack In May of this year, Betty Jane Wylie came to Winnipeg to help launch her latest book, Read- ing Between the Lines: The Diaries of Women. Originally from Winnipeg, she now lives in Ontario. Betty Jane’s father, Dr. Jack McKenty, was a general practitioner and her mother, Ingibjorg, was the daughter of Hans Peter and Sigridur Tergesen of Gimli. In 1973, when Betty fane was only forty-two years old, her husband died very suddenly, leav- ing her with four children, the youngest being only ten years old at the time. In her grief she wrote in her diary — sometimes three times a day. She used the insight she gained to help oth- ers by writing about her experience. Over the years she has been a very prolific writer, this latest be- ing her twenty-eighth book. Betty Jane was well prepared for her wri ting career. She holds a graduate degree in English, with a major in twentieth century poetry and a minor in Anglo-Saxon and Old Norse. She is an author, playwright and poet, but she loves theatre best. When she described her home by a lake, I was filled with admiration. I happen to oxen a winterized cottage by a lake. While it is a place I love dearly, it would take a great strength of char- acter and courage for me to live there alone as Betty Jane does in her home “in the woods. ” On May Day, I was waiting for her in the lounge of the Royal Plaza in downtown Winni- peg, our meeting having been arranged by Lorna Tergesen. Betty Jane had been attending one in- terview after another• since 9:30 in the morn- ing. It was now 7:30 in the evening. Although her voice was hoarse from talking all day and she was, no doubt, very tired, she was the perfect hostess as we entered her hotel room. She offered me a glass of wine as we sat down to begin our conversation. Agnes Bardal Comack: Your latest book, Reading Between the Lines: The Diaries of Women, raises issues that are connected to issues in other books you have written. For example, you say, “Grief is a staggering ex- perience but an immensely creative proc- ess.” Would you elaborate on that? Betty Jane Wylie: Every loss is accom- panied by gain. It’s ironic often but it’s true of any loss you encounter, not just death. There’s always a gain involved as well so you must look at the positive side. You capital- ize on the gain and the difference rather than walk backward and keep looking at the past because you can’t change that. Emily Murphy, the social change agent in Alberta who was the one responsible for women being declared “persons” in Canada, used the wonderful line, “fronting fate abreast.” Comack: I haven’t read all of your books but I can’t imagine any one of them being more important than Beginnings: A Book for Widows. I bought it for my sister-in-law who lost her husband very unexpectedly. What is your experience in terms of feedback from that book?

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The Icelandic Canadian

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