Friday 10 November 2017

Farley Mowat & Dan Needles recognized by Woodstock Public Library

Canada 150 series highlights 3 Canadian authors each week

Tessa McWatt is third author in Week 45 of year-long celebration

By Mark Schadenberg
From coast-to-coast Canadians have been celebrating 150 years of Confederation throughout 2017.
The City of Woodstock has joined in the party with added attractions at Cowapolooza, a special concert in Victoria Park on Labour Day weekend, and other festivities.
Joining in the Canada150 recognition was the Woodstock Public Library (WPL) with its 2017: 150 Canadian Authors series. With three writers featured each week for 50 weeks, it depicts the true inventory of talent in our nation with published efforts in fiction and non-fiction, plus many epic sagas.
Fitting into the category of novel story-telling writing is certainly Farley Mowat.
Week 45 features Mowat and the wonderful Dan Needles, along with Tess McWatt.
I haven’t seen a full list of 150 prose producers, but I wonder if the series is building up to a crescendo to the likes of Margaret Atwood, Pierre Berton, Mordecai Richler, Alice Munro, Robertson Davies, Stephen Leacock and Jane Urquhart.


FARLEY MOWAT
In the brochures available at the library, the Mowat books receiving the spotlight are The New Founde Land, the autobiographical The Boat Who Wouldn’t Float, along with Never Cry Wolf, and The Farfarers. Many other publications could have been included certainly, but the premise of The Farfarers makes it an obvious choice as the novel ponders and alternative to the Europeans founding or arrival at North America by giving credit to the Albans. Could British people fleeing Europe have arrived in Labrador before the Vikings?
The Boat Who Wouldn’t Float won a Stephen Leacock Award for humour.
Mowat, who passed away in 2014 at the age of 92, was also a World War II veteran (Including the Moro River battles in Italy), but many of his best known books dealt with Canada’s north.
Mowat was recognized on Canada’s Walk of Fame before he passed away. He was inducted as an Officer of the Order of Canada back in 1981.
I believe, five of his books were turned into feature or TV movies: The Snow Walker (2003), Lost in the Barrens (1990), Lost in the Barrens II: The Curse of the Viking Grave (1992), Never Cry Wolf(1983) and A Whale for the Killing (1981).
Berton also penned many important books, including Klondike: The Last Gold Rush.



DAN NEEDLES
Dan Needles is interesting in my opinion as most of his 1-actor stories / plays have starred Rod Beattie as Walt Wingfield and surround the tales of Wingfield Farms (7 books and/or plays from 1985- 2009) and the fictional locations of Larkspur and Persephone Township.
The Letters From Wingfield Farm evolved from a newspaper column, and over the years the productions have been a staple across Canada in Beattie touring shows, including the Stratford Festival.
Needles has written his entire career as he also spent a tenure as a speechwriter at Queen’s Park.
The WPL series includes three books with Wingfield in the title plus With Axe And Flask: The History of Persephone Township. This book was the Stephen Leacock humour award in 2003. It is interesting to see how a series of characters in a fictional village (rural area) evolve over a 25-year span.
Today, Needles lives on a hobby farm he has named Larkspur.
Dan Needles

LINKS:
www.mywpl.ca
http://markroyallepage.blogspot.ca/2017/03/canada-150-is-about-recalling.html
http://markroyallepage.blogspot.ca/2017/08/have-you-seen-hoopla-at-wwwmywplca.html


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Passing along a big congratulations today 
to the Woodstock Public Library
for its Canada 150 series promoting our nation's authors


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