Sheila Heti Popular Books

Sheila Heti Biography & Facts

Sheila Heti (; born 25 December 1976) is a Canadian writer. Early life Sheila Heti was born on 25 December 1976 in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. Her parents are Hungarian Jewish immigrants. Her brother is comedian David Heti. Her father wanted to name her after Woody Allen, but her mother was opposed. Sheila Heti attended St. Clement's School in Toronto. She graduated from North Toronto Collegiate Institute in Toronto. She then studied playwriting at the National Theatre School of Canada (leaving the program after one year) and then art history and philosophy at the University of Toronto. Heti has described Marquis de Sade and Henry Miller as early literary influences. Career Heti's writing spans a variety of genres, including plays, short fiction, and novels. She has contributed to periodicals including Flare, London Review of Books, Brick, Open Letters, Maisonneuve, Bookforum, n+1, the Look, McSweeney's, and the New York Times. Heti's books have been published internationally, including France, Italy, Germany, Spain, The Netherlands, Sweden, and Denmark. She formerly worked as the interviews editor at The Believer where she also conducts interviews regularly. She contributed a column on acting to Maisonneuve. Heti is the creator of Trampoline Hall, a popular monthly lecture series based in Toronto and New York, at which people speak on subjects outside their areas of expertise. The New Yorker praised the series for "celebrating eccentricity and do-it-yourself inventiveness". It has sold out every show since its inception in December 2001. For the early part of 2008, Heti kept a blog called The Metaphysical Poll, where she posted the sleeping dreams people were having about Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton during the 2008 primary season, which readers sent in. Awards Acting and theater Heti was an actress as a child, and as a teenager appeared in shows directed by Hillar Liitoja, the founder and artistic director of the experimental DNA Theatre. She appears in Margaux Williamson's 2010 film, Teenager Hamlet, and plays Lenore Doolan in Leanne Shapton's book, Important Artifacts and Personal Property from the Collection of Lenore Doolan and Harold Morris, including Books, Street Fashion, and Jewelry. In November 2013, Jordan Tannahill directed Heti's play All Our Happy Days Are Stupid at Toronto's Videofag. It was remounted in February 2015 at The Kitchen in New York. Heti's decade-long struggle to write the play is a primary plot element in her novel How Should a Person Be? Books The Middle Stories Heti's first book, The Middle Stories, a collection of thirty short stories, was published by House of Anansi in Canada in 2001 when she was twenty-four. It was subsequently published by McSweeney's in the United States in 2002. It has been translated into German, French, Spanish and Dutch. Ticknor Heti's novella, Ticknor, was released in 2005. The novel's main characters are based on real people: William Hickling Prescott and George Ticknor, although the facts of their lives are altered. It was published by House of Anansi Press in Canada, Farrar, Straus & Giroux in the United States, and Éditions Phébus in France. How Should a Person Be? Heti's How Should a Person Be? was published in September 2010. She describes it as a work of constructed reality, based on recorded interviews with her friends, particularly the painter Margaux Williamson. It was published by Henry Holt in the United States in July 2012 in a slightly different edition (she has spoken in interviews about the edits she made), and the subtitle "A novel from life" was added. It was chosen by The New York Times as one of the 100 Best Books of 2012 and by James Wood of The New Yorker as one of the best books of the year. It was also included on year-end lists on Salon, The New Republic, The New York Observer, and more. In her 2007 interview with Dave Hickey for The Believer, she noted, "Increasingly I'm less interested in writing about fictional people, because it seems so tiresome to make up a fake person and put them through the paces of a fake story. I just – I can't do it." The Chairs Are Where the People Go In 2011, she published The Chairs are Where the People Go, which she wrote with her friend, Misha Glouberman. The New Yorker called it "a triumph of conversational philosophy" and named it one of the Best Books of 2011. We Need a Horse McSweeney's commissioned this children's book from Heti. It was illustrated by Clare Rojas. Women in Clothes In Fall 2014, Heti published a non-fiction book about women's relationship to what they wear, with co-editors Leanne Shapton and Heidi Julavits. It was a crowd-sourced book, featuring the voices of 639 women from around the world. The book was published by Penguin in the US and the UK, with a German edition published in 2015 by S. Fischer, Frankfurt am Main. It spent several months on The New York Times Best Seller list. Motherhood In May 2018, Heti published an autobiographical novel, Motherhood, focused on her deliberation on whether or not to have children. Initially conceived as a non-fiction work, Heti explores the emphasis society places on motherhood and how women are judged regardless of their decision: "...a woman will always be made to feel like a criminal, whatever choice she makes, however hard she tries. Mothers feel like criminals. Nonmothers do, too." The book was named as a shortlisted finalist for the 2018 Scotiabank Giller Prize. LitHub named her novel, Motherhood, as a Favorite Book of 2018 and a New York Times Critics Pick of 2018. Pure Colour Pure Colour, a new novel exploring the human condition, appeared in 2022. It was the winner of the Governor General's Award for English-language fiction at the 2022 Governor General's Awards. Alphabetical Diaries Alphabetical Diaries was released in early 2024. Heti had taken a decade's worth of diaries, and ordered the sentences alphabetically, before spending another decade or so paring them down into a new book. Personal life Heti lives in Toronto. Bibliography Author Heti, Sheila (2001). The Middle Stories. McSweeney's Publishing. ISBN 9781938073090. —— (2005). Ticknor: A Novel. Farrar, Straus and Giroux. ISBN 9781429935579. ——; Glouberman, Misha (2011). The Chairs Are Where the People Go. Farrar, Straus and Giroux. ISBN 9780865479456. —— (2011). We Need a Horse. illust. by Clare Rojas. McSweeney's Publishing. ISBN 9781936365401. —— (2012). How Should a Person Be?: A Novel from Life. Henry Holt and Company. ISBN 9781429943482. —— (2015). All Our Happy Days Are Stupid. McSweeney's Publishing. ISBN 9781940450803. —— (2018). Motherhood. Henry Holt and Company. ISBN 9781627790772. —— (2022). Pure Colour. Knopf Canada. ISBN 9780735282452. —— (2024). Alphabetical Diaries. Farrar, Straus & Giroux. ISBN 9780374610784. Short stories "The Raspberry Bush" "The Poet and the Novelist as Roommates" "Mermaid in a Jar" What Changed" "Eleanor" Essays "I Didn't Like Sitting With the Rattle .... Discover the Sheila Heti popular books. Find the top 100 most popular Sheila Heti books.

Best Seller Sheila Heti Books of 2024

  • Big Swiss synopsis, comments

    Big Swiss

    Jen Beagin

    NATIONAL BESTSELLER AND CULT FAVORITENamed a Best Book of the Year by the New Yorker, Time, NPR, Vogue, Elle, Cosmopolitan, Huffington Post, NBC News, Lit Hub, theSkimm, Condé Nast...

  • Molly synopsis, comments

    Molly

    Blake Butler

    A gripping, unforgettable memoir from one of the best, most original writers of the 21st century. Blake Butler has changed the world of language with his mindmelting literary ...

  • Six Little Miracles synopsis, comments

    Six Little Miracles

    Janet Walton

    Janet had been told she couldn't have children, so she and her husband Graham were overjoyed to find out she was pregnant. Then they told it was not just one baby, but six!On 18 No...

  • Kasse 19 synopsis, comments

    Kasse 19

    Claire-Louise Bennett

    »10 Best Books of 2022.« The New York Times Book Review»Brillant, einzigartig, feministisch. ClaireLouise Bennett ist eine großartige Autorin.« Sinéad Gleeson Mit atemberaubender ...

  • A Garden of Creatures synopsis, comments

    A Garden of Creatures

    Sheila Heti & Esmé Shapiro

    A tender and deeply moving picture book about loss and the big questions it leaves behind from New York Times bestselling author Sheila Heti and acclaimed illustrator Esmé Shapiro....

  • Vacuum in the Dark synopsis, comments

    Vacuum in the Dark

    Jen Beagin

    From the Whiting Award–winning author of Pretend I’m Dead and one of the most exhilarating new voices in fiction, a “thoroughly delightfully, surprisingly profound” (Entertainment ...

  • The Unmarried Mother synopsis, comments

    The Unmarried Mother

    Sheila Tofield

    Sheila Tofield tells her moving true story about being a single mother in 1950s Britain, in The Unmarried Mother.'A searing, honest testimony' Lesley PearseSheila grew up in Rother...

  • Straying synopsis, comments

    Straying

    Molly McCloskey

    “A memoirvivid portrait of a vertiginous affair” (Vogue) for readers of Jenny Offill, Garth Greenwell, and Anne Enright, an unforgettable novel about a young American expat who set...

  • Barbara synopsis, comments

    Barbara

    Joni Murphy

    Like Nolan’s Oppenheimer by way of Lucia Berlin, a radiant novel tracking the lifecycle of a silver screen starlet rising against the backdrop of the mid20th century.Barbara is bor...

  • Bright and Dangerous Objects synopsis, comments

    Bright and Dangerous Objects

    Anneliese MacKintosh

    “Original, inventive, and incredibly enjoyable.” Lydia KieslingCommercial deepsea diver Solvig has a secret. She wants to be one of the first human beings to colonize Mars, and she...

  • Land der Frauen synopsis, comments

    Land der Frauen

    Maria Sanchez

    María Sánchez ist Landtierärztin ein körperlich sehr herausfordernder Beruf, der in ihrer Familie bisher nur von Männern ausgeübt worden ist. Als ihre Großmutter an Demenz erkrank...

  • Beautiful Chaos synopsis, comments

    Beautiful Chaos

    Jessica Urlichs

    The Instant Sunday Times Bestseller'The words awaken the magic of life by celebrating the ordinary' Giovanna Fletcher'Beautifully heartfelt, inspiringly poignant and therapeutical...

  • El primer hombre malo synopsis, comments

    El primer hombre malo

    Miranda July

    Un debut novelístico deslumbrante que te desconcertará, por una de las voces más originales del panorama actual, un icono del indie americano: Miranda July.La vida de Cheryl Glickm...

  • 7 best short stories - Motherhood synopsis, comments

    7 best short stories - Motherhood

    Matsuo Basho, Willa Cather, Sherwood Anderson, T. S. Arthur, James Joyce, Guy de Maupassant & August Nemo

    Motherhood is defined in the dictionary as "the experience of having and raising a child". But we know that there is much more to motherhood than the simplicity of this def...

  • Mother Winter synopsis, comments

    Mother Winter

    Sophia Shalmiyev

    "Lyrical and emotionally gutting." O, THE OPRAH MAGAZINE “Intellectually satisfying [and] artistically profound.” KIRKUS REVIEWS (STARRED REVIEW) “Mesmeric.”THE PARIS REVIEW “Vivid...

  • The Skunks synopsis, comments

    The Skunks

    Fiona Warnick

    “A gleaming, zany little gem.” Annie Hartnett, author of Unlikely AnimalsReminiscent of Elif Batuman and Sally Rooney, Fiona Warnick’s precise and tender prose captures the formati...

  • Misrecognition synopsis, comments

    Misrecognition

    Madison Newbound

    For fans of Rachel Cusk and Patricia Lockwood, an unflinchingly sharp and funny debut novel about the internet, postpostmodern adulthood, and queer identity. Elsa is struggling. He...

  • The Details synopsis, comments

    The Details

    Ia Genberg & Kira Josefsson

    Featured in The New Yorker's "Best Books of 2023" Shortlisted for the International Booker Prize"The literal fever that begins the book mirrors the feverish beginnings and endings ...

  • We Were Young synopsis, comments

    We Were Young

    Niamh Campbell

    'Witty, fiery, wistful and even shocking, with engrossing heady prose, Campbell's style is unique' Irish Independent'An immensely enjoyable novel, and a great validation of Campbel...

  • One Woman Show synopsis, comments

    One Woman Show

    Christine Coulson

    A “modern masterwork” (NPR)remarkably told through museum wall labelsabout a 20thcentury woman who transforms herself from a precious object into an unforgettable protagonist.Autho...

  • Hurricanes in Perfect Power synopsis, comments

    Hurricanes in Perfect Power

    Various Artists & Candice Brathwaite

    A stunning new collection of short stories about motherhood, selected and introduced by Candice Brathwaite.'To describe my mother would be to write about a hurricane in its perfect...

  • Couplets synopsis, comments

    Couplets

    Maggie Millner

    “An astounding debut.”Adrienne Raphel, The New York Times Book ReviewA dazzling love story in poems about one woman’s comingout, comingofage, and coming undoneA woman lives an ordi...