- Findley, Timothy
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▪ Canadian authorin full Timothy Irving Frederick Findleyborn October 30, 1930, Toronto, Ontario, Canadadied June 20, 2002, FranceCanadian author known for his intelligent writing and storytelling. His subject matter is often the lives of troubled individuals.Poor health caused Findley to abandon formal education after the ninth grade. At age 17 he began a 15-year acting career that led to roles in several television dramas and Shakespeare productions; a protégé of British actor Alec Guinness (Guinness, Sir Alec), he appeared on the English and American stage. He also began writing short stories during the 1950s. His first two novels are set in southern California, where he lived for a time. The Last of the Crazy People (1967) is about a despairing, obsessive boy whose attempts to cope with his dysfunctional family lead to murder and madness, while The Butterfly Plague (1969) presents a late-1930s Hollywood family whose members embody the world's ills.In the early 1970s Findley wrote radio and television scripts and a play, Can You See Me Yet? (produced 1976), then followed with his two most acclaimed novels. The Wars (1977) features the dilemmas of soldier Robert Ross as he attempts to cope with an officer and 130 doomed horses in the midst of World War I. Famous Last Words (1981) is narrated by Ezra Pound's character Hugh Selwyn Mauberley and features noted real (as well as fictional) characters trying to manipulate the catastrophes of World War II for their personal ends. Not Wanted on the Voyage (1984) is the story of Noah's ark, told from the viewpoints of its animal passengers. The Telling of Lies (1986) is a mystery story. Dinner Along the Amazon (1984), Stones (1988), and Any Time at All and Other Stories (1993) are collections of Findley's short stories. He also wrote Inside Memory: Pages from a Writer's Notebook (1990) and the novels Headhunter (1993) and The Piano Man's Daughter (1995). His autobiography, From Stone Orchard, was published in 1998.
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Universalium. 2010.