After graduating from ±«Óătv with a BA in English and Theatre, Shandi Mitchell began making short films like Tell Me, Babaâs House and Gasoline Puddles. Her adventures in filmmaking netted her stellar reviews, festival showings and more awards and accolades than you can shake a stick at. But she never published a novel until 2009âs Under This Unbroken Sky â a novel, which like her films, picked up a bevy of awards including the Commonwealth Regional Prize, Thomas Head Raddall Fiction Award, and Margaret and John Savage First Book award.
Now Ms. Mitchell is about to undertake another new experience; sheâs visiting Dal for the first time since she graduated. She'll read selections from her debut novel at a reading tonight in the Special Collections Reading Room of the Killam Library.
When asked to describe her book, Ms. Mitchell first laughingly warns that âItâs always sudden, trying to encapsulate your work.â She then explains (with a coy succinctness that belies her disclaimer) âItâs about pride, and hunger, and the cost of surviving.â The novel, which follows the lives of Ukrainian immigrants to the Canadian prairies, was in part influenced by Ms. Mitchellâs own background; she has Ukrainian heritage and lived in the Prairies as a child.
âThe inspiration came from a fact I discovered years ago,â she says of the bookâs inception. âI was always told then my grandfather had died of the flu in the â30s, and the fact was he had not.â As for the significance of the titular reference to the sky, âItâs the one thing thatâs not broken in this book.â
Though Under This Unbroken Sky is her first novel, Ms. Mitchell says its composition was âexciting. I found it exhilarating. To have the freedom to create without the need of permission⊠I could be inside a character, and thatâs very different from the experience of a filmmaker⊠Iâm hoping to start working on the next book.â Sheâs keeping the fine points of that project a secret for now. âIâm superstitious. I actually donât like talking about a work until I know what it is.â
Sheâs more comfortable talking about her new film, which is further along in development. âThat storyâs actually set in Nova Scotia⊠in the Atlantic Ocean. Six men, two dories and the fight to get home.â Ms. Mitchell isnât concerned about juggling prose writing and film. âSo far Iâve been able to leapfrog.â
'They understand the horizon'
Whether the open ocean or the lone prairie, Ms. Mitchell almost compulsively orients herself around the implications of location in her writing. âThe geography for me and the character are almost inseparable,â she says. âItâll inform your values, your point of view.â She says the geography of the Prairies and of the Maritimes have a lot more in common than one might think. âThereâs something about an infinite horizon,â whether itâs rolling wheat fields or the endless sea. âPeople can find it quite oppressive to be in that environment. It challenges you.â
She even asserts that in her experience, Prairie natives rarely get as seasick as their landlocked counterparts. She recounts being told by a shipâs captain that âThe Prairie people come out here and theyâre okay. They understand the horizon.â
When asked about her inspirations, Ms. Mitchell is mild. âJust ordinary people inspire me⊠I donât have heroes. Iâm interested in the good, I guess.â And what advice would she give to aspiring writers who might also enjoy winning various prizes and giving public readings at Dal? âRead. Write. Travel. Live.â I point out that it is likely anyone reading this article will at least nominally be living (Dal Newsâ zombie readership is down) and she clarifies. âTo live, I would define it as to be open, to go beyond your world⊠for me itâs about listening, and observing, and receiving whatâs given to you. Itâs about living in the world that youâre in.â
That belief in âlivingâ informs Ms. Mitchellâs work as both a writer and a filmmaker. âI donât know if you can be fully inside yourself to be an artist. You have to be in tune with the world around you⊠you have to find your own voice.â
Shandi Mitchell will read from her debut novel, Under this Unbroken Sky, Thursday, Oct. 28, 7:30 p.m. in the Special Collections Reading Room of the Killam Library.