While I was an intern in the Fiction Department of The New Yorker, I was given a handwritten Alice Munro story to type out. Last week she won the Nobel Prize in literature and I felt like a small little part of something big. In the spring of 2012, every Monday, I would be in the office of The New Yorker at 4 Times Square from 10AM to 6PM. Most of the time, my job was to read the heaps of unsolicited fiction manuscripts that the magazine receives every day. But one day, my supervisor— I was supposed to call him a mentor but our interaction was too limited for a mentorship of any sort— a handsome, young, bespectacled word nerd, handed me a stack of scribbled notes and told me to type them up. But there was one problem— the pages were, somehow, mirrored reflections of the originals. “I don’t know. See if you can find a way to decipher it,” was all he said. So I ended up spending that afternoon with my small compact mirror held up to Alice Munro’s words.