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 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 publications. 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 the 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 was on
The New York Times Best Seller list for several months.
Motherhood In May 2018, Heti published an autobiographical novel,
Motherhood, focused on her deliberation on whether 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. The novel is a meditation and exploration on creation, as the protagonist, Mira, is living in the "first draft of creation." Through Mira's journey of friendship, love, loss and grief, Heti simultaneously seeks what it means to create and what it means for oneself to be a product of creation. Creation is explored through the cosmology of the "creation story" and through art, interpersonal relationships and self-identity.
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. == Awards ==