Roy MacSkimming

Roy MacSkimming
Born Ottawa, Ontario, Canada
Occupation Novelist
Nationality Canadian

Roy MacSkimming is a Canadian novelist, non-fiction writer and cultural policy consultant.

Born in Ottawa, Ontario and educated at the University of Toronto, MacSkimming broke into book publishing in 1964 at Clarke, Irwin and later co-founded New Press, one of Canada’s leading small presses of the 1970s. He has been books editor and literary columnist at The Toronto Star, and has contributed to a number of newspapers and periodicals, including The Globe and Mail, The Ottawa Citizen, Maclean's and Saturday Night. MacSkimming has served as publishing officer with the Canada Council for the Arts, and policy director of the Association of Canadian Publishers.

MacSkimming has written two novels with European settings: Formentera (1972), set in the Balearic Islands, and Out of Love (1993), set in Athens and Crete. He has also written Gordie: A Hockey Legend (1994), an unauthorized biography of Gordie Howe; and Cold War (1996), a reassessment of the 1972 Canada-Soviet hockey series.

MacSkimming draws on his professional lifetime in and around the publishing industry in The Perilous Trade: Publishing Canada's Writers (2003).[1] The title was nominated for the National Business Book Award, and was a Globe and Mail Notable Book of the Year. It was reissued by McClelland & Stewart in an updated paperback edition in 2007.

MacSkimming's third novel, Macdonald, based on the final days of Canada’s founding prime minister Sir John A. Macdonald, was published in 2007.[2] His most recent novel is Laurier in Love (2010), based on the tangled love life of Canadian prime minister Sir Wilfrid Laurier.

MacSkimming lives near Perth, Ontario.

Bibliography

Fiction

Poetry

Novels

Non-Fiction

Awards

References

  1. Medley, Mark (2010) "Picturing Canada", National Post, May 27, 2010, retrieved 2010-10-31
  2. "Required Reading", Ottawa Citizen, September 30, 2007, retrieved 2010-10-31
  3. A 56-page self-stapled paperback. See "poetry and words" at www.wmhawkins.com.
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