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Type d'entité
Personne
Forme autorisée du nom
Robertson, Heather
forme(s) parallèle(s) du nom
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1942-2014
Historique
Heather Robertson was born in Winnipeg in 1942. She received a B.A. (Honours) in English from the University of Manitoba in 1962. During her term as Editor of the University's student newspaper, The Manitoban, Robertson sometimes invoked controversy, for example, a column criticizing Bison football resulted in her being hung in effigy. She was awarded a Woodrow Wilson Fellowship and studied Victorian Literature at Columbia University in New York, where she received an M.A. in English.
Returning to Winnipeg, Robertson began a journalism career at the Winnipeg Free Press. She was quickly hired away by the Winnipeg Tribune, where she worked for two years. Robertson received $3000 to pursue her research on Aboriginal Peoples. The resulting voluminous study became the foundation for her first book Reservations are for Indians, published in 1970. Three years later, she wrote Grass Roots, with Salt of the Earth appearing the following year. In 1975, Robertson profiled Barbara Frum and Judy Lamarsh in the book, Her Own Women. Two years later, she wrote A Terrible Beauty : The Art of Canada at War. In 1981, she chronicled the life of the infamous Winnipeg bank robber, Ken Leishman, in the screenplay, The Flying Bandit.
Robertson's literary career took a new direction in 1983 with the publishing of Willie, A Romance. The book marked the author's initial attempt at fiction, and she garnered a best first novel award, Books in Canada. The intimate look at the life of Prime Minister Mackenzie King was further developed in Lily, A Rhapsody in Red, published in 1986, and Igor, published in 1989. Robertson has published a number of other works of non-fiction. A Gentleman Adventurer: The Arctic Diaries of R.H.G. Bonnycastle (19850. The bestseller More Than a Rose was published in 1991, followed by On The Hill (1992). Robertson also wrote Meeting Death (2000), The Road Well Kept: Branksome Hall Celebrates 100 Years (2001) and Driving Force: The McLaughlin Family and the Age of the Car (2003). In 2003, Robertson edited the autobiography of Angus Shortt, entitled My Life With Birds and co-wrote with Melinda McCracken the book titled Magical, Mysterious Lake of the Woods (2003). This bookreceived the Fred Landon award for the best work on Ontario regional history in 2004.
Robertson also worked for the CBC and wrote columns for Maclean's, Chatelaine, Saturday Night, Canadian Forum, and Equinox. Robertson passed away on her 72nd birthday, on March 19, 2014.
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Created by Elizabeth-Anne Johnson (May 2012). Revised by Chantel Banman (August 2014) and N. Courrier (September 2019).
Langue(s)
- anglais