Robert McGill (born 1976) is a Canadian writer and literary critic. He was born and raised in Wiarton, Ontario. [1] His parents were physical education teachers. [2] He graduated from Queen's University in Kingston, Ontario in 1999. He attended the University of Oxford as a Rhodes Scholar, then completed the MA program in Creative Writing at the University of East Anglia. [3] After graduating with a PhD in English from the University of Toronto, Robert moved to Cambridge, Massachusetts, and took up a Junior Fellowship with the Harvard University Society of Fellows. [4] He now teaches Creative Writing and Canadian Literature at the University of Toronto. [5]
McGill wrote his first novel, The Mysteries, at the University of East Anglia. [6] It was published in 2004, when he was 28. [7] The Mysteries tells of the disappearance of a woman from a fictional small town and the uncovering of local secrets. [3] Told from twelve characters’ perspectives, the story moves back and forward over two years. [8] Prominent in the novel is a stone henge inspired by the real Keppel Henge in Big Bay, Ontario. [9]
McGill began his second novel, Once We Had a Country, while a Harvard Junior Fellow. [6] Once We Had a Country tells the story of a young schoolteacher named Maggie who leaves the United States with her boyfriend, Fletcher, in the summer of 1972 to start a commune on a farm near Niagara Falls. When the US government ends the military draft for the Vietnam War, Fletcher faces family pressure to return home, while Maggie has to deal with the disappearance of her father, a missionary in Laos. [10]
McGill's third novel, A Suitable Companion for the End of Your Life, was published in 2022. [11]
McGill's short fiction has been published in literary magazines including Grain , Descant , and The Fiddlehead [3] , as well as in Toronto Life , The Dalhousie Review , and The New Quarterly [5] . In 2013 his story “The Stress of Lives” was published in Hazlitt [12] and in 2021 his story "Something Something Alice Munro" was published in The Atlantic . [11]
McGill's book The Treacherous Imagination: Intimacy, Ethics, and Autobiographical Fiction investigates people's sense of betrayal when they believe they have been turned into characters in novels or stories. [13]
In 2017, he published a second monograph, War Is Here: The Vietnam War and Canadian Literature. [14] He has also edited an online anthology, Canadian Literature of the Vietnam War. [15]
His other academic publications include articles on Canadian writers Alice Munro, [16] [17] [18] Elizabeth Smart, [19] Thomas King, [20] Hugh MacLennan, [19] and Michael Ondaatje, [21] as well as articles on teaching literary citizenship (co-authored with André Babyn), [22] biographical interpretation in fiction workshops, [23] negotiating cultural difference in creative writing workshops (co-authored with Noor Naga), [24] and myths of literary mentorship (co-authored with Neil Surkan). [25]
In 2001, McGill was a finalist for the RBC Bronwen Wallace Award for Emerging Writers. In 2002, two of his stories, “Confidence Men” and “The Stars Are Falling,” were nominated for the Journey Prize and selected for the Journey Prize Anthology 14. [26] In 2003, his story “Nobody Goes to Vancouver to Die” was shortlisted for a Canadian National Magazine Award.
The Mysteries was named one of the top five Canadian fiction books of 2004 by Quill & Quire . [27] It was also the winner of the 2006 Western Reads competition, garnering twice as many votes as the second-place book. [28]
McGill's scholarly writing has won the Juliet McLauchlan Prize of the Joseph Conrad Society, [6] as well as the George Wicken Prize in Canadian Literature. [29]
In 2018, McGill won the Robert Kroetsch Teaching Award from Canadian Creative Writers and Writing Programs (CCWWP). [30]
Jane Urquhart, LL.D is a Canadian novelist and poet. She is the internationally acclaimed author of seven award-winning novels, three books of poetry and numerous short stories. As a novelist, Urquhart is well known for her evocative style which blends history with the present day. Her first novel, The Whirlpool, gained her international recognition when she became the first Canadian to win France's prestigious Prix du Meilleur Livre Etranger. Her subsequent novels were even more successful. Away, published in 1993, won the Trillium Award and was a national bestseller. In 1997, her fourth novel, The Underpainter, won the Governor General's Literary Award.
Philip Michael Ondaatje is a Sri Lankan-born Canadian poet, fiction writer and essayist.
Carol Ann Shields was an American-born Canadian novelist and short story writer. She is best known for her 1993 novel The Stone Diaries, which won the U.S. Pulitzer Prize for Fiction as well as the Governor General's Award in Canada.
Canadian literature is written in several languages including English, French, and to some degree various Indigenous languages. It is often divided into French- and English-language literatures, which are rooted in the literary traditions of France and Britain, respectively. The earliest Canadian narratives were of travel and exploration.
Alice Ann Munro was a Canadian short story writer who won the Nobel Prize in Literature in 2013. Her work tends to move forward and backward in time, with integrated short story cycles.
Marian Ruth Engel was a Canadian novelist and a founding member of the Writers' Union of Canada. Her most famous and controversial novel was Bear (1976), a tale of erotic love between an archivist and a bear.
Aritha van Herk,, is a Canadian writer, critic, editor, public intellectual, and university professor. Her work often includes feminist themes, and depicts and analyzes the culture of western Canada.
Guy Clarence Vanderhaeghe is a Canadian novelist and short story writer, best known for his Western novel trilogy, The Englishman's Boy, The Last Crossing, and A Good Man set in the 19th-century American and Canadian West. Vanderhaeghe has won three Governor General's Awards for his fiction, one for his short story collection Man Descending in 1982, the second for his novel The Englishman's Boy in 1996, and the third for his short story collection Daddy Lenin and Other Stories in 2015.
Southern Ontario Gothic is a subgenre of the Gothic novel genre and a feature of Canadian literature that comes from Southern Ontario. This region includes Toronto, Southern Ontario's major industrial cities, and the surrounding countryside. While the genre may also feature other areas of Ontario, Canada, and the world as narrative locales, this region provides the core settings.
Elizabeth Grace Hay is a Canadian novelist and short story writer.
John Robert Colombo, CM is a Canadian writer, editor, and poet. He has published over 200 titles, including major anthologies and reference works.
Ernest Buckler was a Canadian novelist and short story writer best known for his 1952 novel, The Mountain and the Valley and the short story The first born Son. "Since its publication in 1954, Ernest Buckler's story of David Canaan's life in the Annapolis Valley, The Mountain and the Valley, has gradually established itself as a touchstone of Canadian Modernism. Its continuing presence in Canadian Literature courses and its effect on such writers as Margaret Laurence and Alice Munro attest to its power as a novel exploring imaginative experience."
Madeleine Thien is a Canadian short story writer and novelist. The Oxford Handbook of Canadian Literature has considered her work as reflecting the increasingly trans-cultural nature of Canadian literature, exploring art, expression and politics inside Cambodia and China, as well as within diasporic East Asian communities. Thien's critically acclaimed novel, Do Not Say We Have Nothing, won the 2016 Governor General's Award for English-language fiction, the Scotiabank Giller Prize, and the Edward Stanford Travel Writing Awards for Fiction. It was shortlisted for the 2016 Man Booker Prize, the 2017 Baileys Women's Prize for Fiction, and the 2017 Rathbones Folio Prize. Her books have been translated into more than 25 languages.
Keith Maillard is an American Canadian novelist, poet, and professor of creative writing at the University of British Columbia. He moved to Canada in 1970 and became a Canadian citizen in 1976.
Douglas Maitland Gibson,C.M. is a Canadian editor, publisher and writer. Best known as the former president and publisher of McClelland and Stewart, he was particularly noted for his professional relationships with many of Canada's most prominent and famous writers.
Robert Lecker is a Canadian scholar, author, and Greenshields Professor of English at McGill University, where he specializes in Canadian literature. He received the H. Noel Fieldhouse Award for Distinguished Teaching at McGill University in 1996. Lecker is a leading authority on Canadian literature. In 2012, Lecker was named a Fellow of the Royal Society of Canada in recognition of his influential studies on literary value in English Canada and Canadian cultural identity. In addition to his teaching and academic writing, Lecker has held a number of prominent positions in the Canadian publishing industry throughout his career. He founded ECW Press in 1997, he co-edited the Canadian literary journal Essays on Canadian Writing between 1975 and 2004, he has edited several anthologies of Canadian and international literature, and he currently heads a literary agency in Montreal, the Robert Lecker Agency.
Saleema Nawaz is a Canadian author whose works of short fiction have been published in literary journals such as Prairie Fire, PRISM International, Grain, The Dalhousie Review, and The New Quarterly. Nawaz was born in Ottawa, Ontario and later moved to Winnipeg, Manitoba in order to study English at the University of Manitoba, where she received her M.A. with a creative writing thesis. Her first complete collection of short fiction, entitled Mother Superior, was published by Freehand Books in 2008. Nawaz completed her first novel, Bone and Bread, published by Anansi Press in 2013, while residing in Montreal, Quebec.
Turnstone Press is a Canadian literary publisher founded in 1976 in Winnipeg, Manitoba, the oldest in Manitoba and among the most respected independent publishers in Canada.
NeWest Press is a Canadian publishing company. Established in Edmonton, Alberta, in 1977, the company grew out of a literary magazine, NeWest Review, which had been launched in 1975. Early members of the collective that founded the company included writer Rudy Wiebe and University of Alberta academics Douglas Barbour, George Melnyk, and Diane Bessai.
Bear is a novel by Canadian author Marian Engel, published in 1976. It won the Governor General's Literary Award the same year. It is Engel's fifth novel, and her most famous. The story tells of a lonely archivist sent to work in northern Ontario, where she enters into a sexual relationship with a bear. The Canadian Encyclopedia calls the book "the most controversial novel ever written in Canada".