In Crackpot (1974), the protagonist is an obese Jewish prostitute who reflects upon the various trials and triumphs of her unusual life. A comic and wonderfully affirmative moral novel, it is deeply rooted in the concrete world of Winnipeg's north end and also reaches mythic dimensions. Her most autobiographical work, Old Woman at Play (1978), provides aesthetic insights into her novels, combining descriptions of her mother's dollmaking and the author's speculations on artistic creativity. Wiseman also published her reminiscences of the Winnipeg Farmers' Market, Old Markets, New World (1964), a play, Testimonial Dinner (1978), a children's story, Kenji and the Cricket (1986), and a collection of essays, Memoirs of a Book-Molesting Childhood (1987).
Author COLIN BOYD
Suggested Reading
Michael Greenstein, "Adele Wiseman" in Canadian Writers and Their Works (1985); and Third Solitudes: Tradition and Discontinuity in Jewish-Canadian Literature (1989).
Links to Other Sites
Guide to Canadian Literary Papers at York University Archives
This website offers online biographies of prominent Canadian writers and a guide to related archives maintained by York University Archives and Special Collections. Click on the menu on the left side of the screen for information about specific authors.


The Dominion government's advertisement asked for volunteers "able to read and write either the English or French language" with "good antecedents" who were good horsemen...
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