Photo from Gabrielle Roy: du manuscrit virtuel
Gabrielle Roy was born in St. Boniface (across the Red River from Winnipeg) in 1909. She had ten siblings, all older.
After high school, she attended the Winnipeg Normal Institute and began to teach school.
Later, she took up acting, joining the Cercle Moliere, a theatre troupe, and went to Europe, where she briefly studied acting. After spending time in France and the UK, she returned to Canada, settled in Montreal and began publishing her writing in various journals.
1945 was the year of her debut novel, Bonheur d'occasion. Published in 1946 in English as The Tin Flute, it won the Governor General's Literary Award for fiction. The same year, 700,000 copies of the book were sold and Universal Studios in Hollywood bought the film rights.
This novel, a major departure from the typical novels of the time, realistically portrayed the harsh life of a poor Montreal family, and was popular in both English and French. It was republished as part of the New Canadian Library in 1989. A Surrey elementary school has been named for her.
Other well-known works (English titles) include Where Nests the Water Hen (1950), Street of Riches (1956), and The Road Past Altamount (1966). Windflower (1970) is the story of a child with a dual heritage: his father is an American GI and his mother is an Inuit. Phyllis Webb describes it here. Gabrielle Roy died in 1983.
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ReplyDeletewow I did not know about her, thanks Carol for sharing a pioneering woman Canadian writer with us she seems to have been successful in her writing endeavors, encouraging!
ReplyDeleteYes, like Martha Ostenso, Gwethalyn Graham, and possibly Mavis Gallant, I think she was well ahead of her time.
ReplyDeleteThanks for reading.
Carol