Graeme Gibson
Template:Short description Template:Use dmy dates Template:Infobox writer Thomas Graeme Cameron Gibson Template:Post-nominals (9 August 1934 – 18 September 2019) was a Canadian novelist.<ref name="canenc">Graeme Gibson's entry in The Canadian Encyclopedia.</ref> He was a Member of the Order of Canada (1992), a Senior Fellow of Massey College and one of the organizers of the Writers Union of Canada (chair, 1974–75). He was also a founder of the Writers' Trust of Canada, a non-profit literary organization that seeks to encourage Canada's writing community.<ref name="canenc"/>
Career
The elder son of Brigadier General Thomas Graeme Gibson, a career Army officer, and radio singer Mary (née Cameron), of Australian origin,<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> Gibson's family frequently moved around during his childhood, going from Halifax to Ottawa to Toronto where he attended Upper Canada College.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> As an author, Gibson wrote both novels and non-fiction. His first novel, Five Legs (1969), is widely regarded as a breakthrough in Canadian experimental literature.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> His other novels include Communion (1971), Gentleman Death (1993), and Perpetual Motion (1982).<ref name="canenc"/> His non-fiction included Eleven Canadian Novelists (1973) and more recently, The Bedside Book of Birds (2005) and The Bedside Book of Beasts (2009).<ref name="canenc"/>
Gibson was awarded the Toronto Arts Award (1990) the Harbourfront Festival prize in 1993, and he was made a member of the Order of Canada.<ref name="canenc"/>
An arts, environmental and social justice advocate, Gibson was one of the founders of the Writers' Union of Canada, which recognized his contribution by establishing an award in his honour in 1991.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> He was involved in the formation of the Writer's Trust of Canada and was a co-founder and president (1987–89) of PEN Canada.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref> He also had a small acting role in the 1983 film The Wars.
His environmental advocacy was largely focused around his longtime love of birds. He was a founder and chair of the Pelee Island Bird Observatory, served on the Council of the World Wildlife Fund, and with Margaret Atwood, as co-chair of Birdlife International's Rare Bird Club. He was a Fellow of the Royal Canadian Geographical Society, which awarded him a Gold Medal in 2015.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
Personal life
Gibson was married to publisher Shirley Gibson until the early 1970s, and together they had two sons, Matt and Grae.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref><ref>Template:Cite news</ref> He began dating novelist and poet Margaret Atwood in 1973.<ref name="canenc" /> They moved to a semi-derelict farm near Alliston, Ontario, which they set about doing up and where according to Atwood they were making "attempts at farming, writing and trying to earn enough to live".<ref name=atwood/> Their daughter Eleanor Jess Atwood Gibson was born there in 1976. The family returned to Toronto in 1980.<ref name="Sutherland2012">Template:Cite book</ref> Atwood and Gibson stayed together until his death in 2019.
In 2017 Gibson was diagnosed with early signs of vascular dementia.<ref>Template:Cite magazine</ref><ref name=atwood/> Despite having written a book on birds, he could no longer identify those he liked to watch in his garden, but said "I no longer know their names, but then, they don't know my name either".<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> He died on 18 September 2019 in London, England, where Atwood was promoting her new book, five days after suffering a severe stroke.<ref>Template:Cite tweet</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref> Atwood later said about his death that it had not been unexpected due to the vascular dementia, had been a good one—and in a good hospital, and his children had time to come and say goodbye—and that he had been "declining and he had wanted to check out before he reached any further stages of that".<ref name=atwood>Template:Cite web</ref>
Following his death, the Writers' Trust of Canada renamed its annual fiction award, formerly the Rogers Writers' Trust Fiction Prize, to the Atwood Gibson Writers' Trust Fiction Prize in early 2021.<ref>"Writers' Trust renames fiction prize after co-founders and couple Atwood and Gibson". CTV News, January 27, 2021.</ref>
Bibliography
- Five Legs (1969)
- Communion (1971)
- Eleven Canadian Novelists (1973)
- Perpetual Motion (1982)
- Gentleman Death (1993)
- The Bedside Book of Birds (2005)
- The Bedside Book of Beasts (2009)
References
- 1934 births
- 2019 deaths
- 20th-century Canadian male writers
- 20th-century Canadian novelists
- 21st-century Canadian male writers
- 21st-century Canadian novelists
- Canadian male non-fiction writers
- Canadian male novelists
- Canadian nature writers
- Harbourfront Festival Prize winners
- Members of the Order of Canada
- Fellows of the Royal Canadian Geographical Society
- Deaths from dementia in England
- Deaths from vascular dementia
- People from New Tecumseth
- Writers from London, Ontario
- Writers from Simcoe County
- Novelists from Ontario