John Wilson Duffie | |
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Born | Saint-Lambert, Quebec, Canada | May 15, 1913
Died | February 9, 1989 75) Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada | (aged
Occupation | Writer, humor columnist |
Nationality | Canadian |
Notable works | Duffie's Unimportance of Being Earnest (1982) |
John Wilson Duffie (May 15, 1913 - February 9, 1989) was a Canadian writer. [1] A longtime humor columnist for the arts and entertainment publication Monday Magazine in Victoria, British Columbia, [2] he was most noted for his 1982 book Duffie's Unimportance of Being Earnest, a collection of his magazine writing which was shortlisted for the Stephen Leacock Memorial Medal for Humour in 1983. [3]
Born in Saint-Lambert, Quebec, [1] Duffie spent much of his working life as a property tax manager for Marathon Realty in Toronto, Ontario, until retiring from that job around age 60. [2] He and his wife Edith then moved to Victoria in 1973, [2] where he began writing "Overset", his Monday Magazine column, just a few weeks after the publication launched in 1975. [4] His writing also appeared in Edmonton magazine and Wildlife Review, [2] whose editor once praised Duffie as the only writer in his publication who could write funny stuff about animals. [5]
In the late 1980s, after his wife's death, he moved to Vancouver to be closer to his daughters and grandchildren, but continued writing his column until his death in 1989. [4] Following his death, the Victoria Public Library set up a memorial endowment fund in his memory. [6]