Programs_Matt Cohen Award In Celebration of a Writing Life

 

2007 RECIPIENT

 

 

David Helwig is a Canadian poet, novelist and essayist. Born in Toronto, Helwig was raised in Niagara-on-the-Lake, Ontario. He has worked in journalism, TV drama, radio drama and as a university lecturer. Helwig has also been a full-time writer since 1980.The founder and longtime editor of the annual Best Canadian Stories, and his most recent poetry book, The Year One, won the Atlantic Poetry Award for 2004. He published the novella Smuggling Donkeys in 2007. Earlier this year, he was named Prince Edward Island's third Poet Laureate.

Selected Publications

Smuggling Donkeys (2007)

The Year One (2004)

The Names of Things (2006)

The King’s Evil (1981)

Jennifer (1979)

A Sound Like Laughter (1973)

Figures in a Landscape (1967)

I first met David in 1981, when I was writing a story about Kingston writers for Books in Canada. I found him standing in a half-finished room with a hammer in his hand; he was renovating an 1840s stone house on Kingston's Montreal Street. Since graduating from the University of Toronto in 1960 and the University of Liverpool in 1962, he had worked in television and radio, and had just left his teaching position at Queen's University to become a full-time writer. His first novel, Streets of Summer, appeared in 1969, when he was 31 years old, and was quickly followed by The Day Before Tomorrow, 1971, The Glass Knight, 1976, Jennifer, 1979, and The King's Evil, in 1981. Novels and short stories have continued to appear every two or three years since then.His is also a prolific and accomplished poet: Figures in a Landscape came out in 1968, and, as with fiction, a new book of poems has appeared every three or four years. He has now published more than 20 books.Since moving to Prince Edward Island in 1996, the pace hasn't slackened a bit. His trilogy of novellas -- The Stand-In (2002); Duet (2004) and Smuggling Donkeys (2007) -- is among his finest work. His most recent book of poems, The Year One, which came out in 2004 and is both a memoir and a quietly intense look at the present, won the Atlantic Poetry Prize for that year. The cover of his recent memoir The Names of Things, shows David standing in the middle of an unfinished room with a hammer in his hand -- just as I remember him.This January, David was named Poet Laureate of Prince Edward Island. And it is with great pleasure that I now present David with the latest in a long series of honours and awards.

- Wayne Grady (Matt Cohen Award Committee member)

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