Waiting for the Piano Tuner to Die, Harriet Richardsโs acclaimed short story collection, to be
re-released in a new edition September 30 by Shadowpaw Press Reprise

Shadowpaw Press Reprise in Regina, Saskatchewan, is thrilled to announce the release on September 30 of a new edition of Waiting for the Piano Tuner to Die, the acclaimed short story collection by Harriet Richards, a finalist for Book of the Year at the 2003 Saskatchewan Book Awards.
โThese ten stories summon environs and echoes from as far away as my four-year-old self, and showcase fictional versions of a few of my dearest and not-so-dear fellow travellers in life,โ says Richards. โWhat a wonderful journey this has been to revisit these worlds and bring them to light once again.
โItโs been a joy for me to read these stories for the first time, and Iโm thrilled to be able to re-introduce them to the reading public,โ says Edward Willett, publisher of Shadowpaw Press. โShadowpaw Press Reprise exists to bring out new editions of notable, previously published books. Waiting for the Piano Tuner to
Die is a perfect example of what the imprint was designed to return to life.โ
More about Waiting for the Piano Tuner to Die
Finalist, Book of the Year, 2003 Saskatchewan Book Awards
“There are forces at play so simple, natural, and accidental that nobody can figure them out
and see them coming.”
In a small prairie town, a teenage girlโs unexpected pregnancy upends her familyโs quiet
rhythms, revealing the tender absurdities of love and loss. In shadowed ravines and forgotten
sheds, a child confronts the rats of her nightmares and the fragile bonds of friendship. A boy
chasing turtles and salamanders discovers the razor-thin line between joy and oblivion, while
siblings navigate a motherโs surreal transformation amid whispers of art, betrayal, and
unspoken curses.
Inย Waiting for the Piano Tuner to Die, Harriet Richards weaves ten haunting tales of ordinary
lives cracked open by the extraordinaryโheartaches, spectral visitations, forbidden desires,
and the quiet violence of human connection. From a womanโs escape from a controlling lover
to a daughterโs reckoning with her motherโs final romance, these stories pulse with dark
humour, poignant insight, and the raw poetry of the everyday, exploring the ties that
bindโand breakโus, in a world in which โthereโs lots more sorrow flying around peopleโs
heads than there is joy.โ
Even though that sorrow may be heartbreaking, and occasionally horrific, the reader is
constantly reminded, with the quiet, clear-eyed, and sometimes mischievous irony of Harriet
Richardsโs voice, that in this worldโin the least likely placesโwe may entertain angels
unawares.
Praise for Waiting for the Piano Tuner to Die
Finalist, Book of the Year, 2003 Saskatchewan Book Awards
โRichards, at her best when she enters psychological terrain, maps psychic contours with chilling
accuracy and eerie pulchritudeย .ย .ย . A piano tuner adjusts the instrumentโs strings to ensure it
sounds harmonious. The same might be said of Richardsโs talent for creating organically unified
short fictions of the first order.โโThe Globe and Mail
โIn Waiting for the Piano Tuner to Die, Harriet Richards has once again proven her considerable
skill as a writer of literary fiction. Her first book, The Lavender Child, a quiet but shimmering
novel concerning three generations of one family, showcased Richardsโ knack for
characterizationย .ย .ย . the author has followed up with a collection of stories that holds its own
among the best in the genre.โโSaskatoon Star-Phoenix
โWhile lyrical and affecting, there is nothing precious, nothing sentimental in this collection. Itโs
edgy fiction grounded in the flat and vast Saskatchewan landscape: the environments are
expansive but the stories dig deep.โโPlanet, the Welsh Internationalist
More about the author
Harriet Richards was born in Toronto, Ontario, as the fifth of seven children to a Welsh father
and an American mother. Her family relocated to the prairies during her childhood. Initially
pursuing a career as a visual artist, her creative focus shifted when an obstinate painting,
inspired by a recurring dream, evolved into her first short story.
Richards is the author of three acclaimed works of fiction. The Lavender Child (1998) was a
finalist for the Fiction Award and won the First Book Award at the Saskatchewan Book Awards.
Waiting for the Piano Tuner to Die (2003) was a finalist for Book of the Year, and The Pious
Robber (2013) was also a finalist for Book of the Year and won the Fiction Award. Her short fiction has appeared in literary journals in Canada and Wales, and her paintings have been
featured on book covers in both countries.
Richards has guided emerging writers through the Saskatchewan Writersโ Guild and edited
numerous works of fiction and literary essays for authors across Canada. She resides in
Saskatoon, Saskatchewan.
About Shadowpaw Press
Shadowpaw Press, located in Regina, Saskatchewan, Canada, was founded in 2018 by award-
winning author Edward Willett. Shadowpaw Press is a member of Literary Press Group (Canada)
and the Association of Canadian Publishers and publishes an eclectic selection of books by both
new and established authors, including adult fiction, young adult fiction, childrenโs books,
nonfiction, and anthologies.
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