Norman Levine

Norman Isaiah Pryce Levine (October 22, 1923 – June 14, 2005) was a Canadian short-story writer, novelist and poet. He is perhaps best remembered for his terse prose. Though he was part of the St. Ives artistic community in Cornwall, and friends with painters Patrick Heron and Francis Bacon, his written expression was not abstract, but concrete. "The leaner the language the more suggestive," he wrote in his 1993 essay, Sometimes It Works.[1]

Life and career

Norman Levine was born on October 22, 1923 in Minsk, Poland, but spent most of his adult life in England.

His Jewish family had fled from Poland to Canada with the advent of anti-Semitism in the years prior to World War II.[2] His adolescence was spent on the streets of Ottawa, but his coming of age was his time as a Lancaster bomber pilot for the Canadian division of the Royal Air Force. He was based at Leeming.

Post-war he met an Englishwoman, Margaret, settled down and had three children. His writing, a reflection of his life, was also a direct influence on that life, as he had little money to keep up rent payments; as a result his family often moved.

After England he lived, for a time, in Canada, with his second wife. He also lived in France before finally returning to England, where he died ten years later.

In 2002 he was presented with the Matt Cohen Prize (established in 2001 by the Writers' Trust of Canada to recognize a lifetime of work by a Canadian writer).

Bibliography

Short stories

Novels

Poetry

Non-fiction

Editor

References

  1. Oldham, A. (2005, July 1). Norman Levine: Novelist with painter’s perception. The Guardian.
  2. Oldham, A. (2005, July 1). Norman Levine: Novelist with painter’s perception. The Guardian.

External links


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