Featured Alumni
Photo of Sheila Heti

Trinity College | Faculty of Arts & Science

Sheila Heti

Bachelor of Arts (BA) 2002

Sheila Heti can talk about "how should a person be?"  But it's really better for people to read what she writes about it.

Sheila Heti is a multi-talented novelist and editor. Her fifth book is How Should a Person Be?

Heti has been writing since she was 16. A reviewer said her first collection of stories, The Middle Stories, written when she was in her early twenties, “takes the reader from subjective involvement with the characters, through a series of absurdly unfortunate twists and turns, to a point of almost eerie detachment.”

How Should a Person Be? is a novel that leans heavily on the real lives of Heti and her artistic colleagues in Toronto. In an interview with the New York Times, she was asked if her book was tactically boring in some way. She said “I hope so. Some of my favourite experiences of art are when I am there but my attention has wandered. I think stimulation is overrated, and persistent stimulation is exhausting. You sometimes have to be banal, tedious; make the rhythm go soft and slow, give the mind a rest. I’d rather that people could be both entertained and given rest while reading my book, than for someone to have to put the book down to take a rest.”

There has been little time to rest for Heti. She has written for the New York Times, The Guardian, The Globe and Mail, among others, and her work has been translated into a dozen languages, including Serbian. In 2011, she became Interviews Editor at The Believer.

She created the Trampoline Hall lecture series where people deliver lectures on subject outside their areas of expertise. In 2008, she created the Metaphysical Poll, a blog that collected the sleeping dreams people were having about Hilary Clinton and Barack Obama during the Democratic primaries.

Heti also appeared in the film Teenage Hamlet, and with her colleague Margaux Williamson, runs The Production Front, which puts on shows and promotes the work of other artists.

She recently published an illustrated book for children, We Need a Horse.

Published Nov. 28, 2013.

Related Alumni

Margaret MacMillan

Trinity College | Faculty of Arts & Science

Margaret MacMillan tells students if they follow their intellectual passions and keep learning, they’ll boldly go across boundaries.

Allen Lau

Faculty of Applied Science & Engineering | School of Graduate Studies

When a headline asks whether your company can “save reading”, you know you’ve got it made. Allen Lau’s Wattpad is on fire.

David C. Onley

University of Toronto Scarborough | Faculty of Arts & Science

In 1984, David Onley commenced a 22-year career with CityTV as Canada’s first on-air reporter with a visible disability.

Bonnie Stern

New College | Faculty of Arts & Science

From her early beginnings as a chef to opening her renowned cooking school, Bonnie Stern has become a Canadian culinary guru.
See all featured Alumni

Don’t miss out!

Update your contact information to be the first to know about exclusive offers. This makes it easy to tell us when your email has changed.

Update my information

Special discounts

Did you know that U of T alumni get deep discounts on attractions, sporting events, car rentals and more? Check back often for new offers.  

Find the latest deals
Close