David Walker (author)

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David Walker

Born9 February 1911
Dundee, Scotland
Died5 March 1992(1992-03-05) (aged 81)
St Andrews, New Brunswick, Canada
OccupationNovelist
NationalityScottish/Canadian
Period1955 to 1984
GenreDrama

David Harry Walker CM MBE (9 February 1911 – 5 March 1992) was a Canadian novelist. He was born in Dundee, Scotland, later moving to St Andrews, New Brunswick, Canada, where he began his career as a writer. His work has been made into films.

Biography[edit]

David Walker was born near Dundee, Scotland and received his early education in Shrewsbury, later enrolling at the Royal Military College, Sandhurst. After graduation in 1931, he was commissioned in the Black Watch. He served with the foreign battalion in India and Sudan (1932–38) and in Canada (1938–39) as aide-de-camp to Governor-General Lord Tweedsmuir, the novelist John Buchan.

There he met Willa Magee of Montreal, and they married on 27 July 1939. The couple had four sons together: Giles, Barclay, David, and Julian.

In September 1939, amid the threat of war, Walker returned to Britain, where he trained recruits. The next year he was posted to France with The Black Watch 51st Highland Division. Captured by the Germans at St. Valery in June 1940, he spent nearly 5 years in prisoner of war camps, escaping three times; each time he was recaptured after getting outside the camp. While interned at Colditz Castle, he began to write poetry.

Freed by American troops in 1945, he was later awarded the M.B.E. In 1946 he travelled to India, where he served for a short time as comptroller of the household for Viceroy Lord Wavell (1946–47). Following retirement from the British army, Walker returned briefly to Scotland.

He emigrated to St. Andrews, New Brunswick in 1948, intent on becoming a writer. A prolific author, Walker enjoyed a long and successful career, publishing approximately 100 short stories and 20 books. His novels The Pillar, about a prisoner of war camp, and Digby, a Scottish highlands story, won the Governor General's award for fiction for 1952 and 1953, respectively. Several of his books, including Geordie (1955), were made into motion pictures. Geordie was set in his native Scotland, while Mallabec and Pirate Rock were set in his adopted home province of New Brunswick. Where the High Winds Blow, written following a dogsled adventure in the Canadian North, is considered his most popular Canadian novel. His last book, Lean, Wind, Lean, an autobiography, was published in 1984.

Two other motion pictures, Harry Black (1958) and Amanita Pestilens (1963) were based on Walker's stories. A plan to film Digby in Scotland with Spencer Tracy was aborted.[1]

Apart from his writing career, Walker took a keen interest in community affairs. An active conservationist, he served as president of Sunbury Shores Arts and Nature Centre in St. Andrews and as chair of St. Andrews Centennial Park. Between 1965 and 1991, he sat as a commissioninterner of the Roosevelt Campobello International Park Commission, serving as chair from 1970 to 1972.

His success as a writer and his community involvement won him recognition. In 1955 the University of New Brunswick awarded him an honorary doctor of letters, and in 1987 he was made a Member of the Order of Canada. Walker died at St. Andrews on 5 March 1992, at age 81.[2]

Works[edit]

  • 1949 The Storm and The Silence
  • 1950 Geordie
  • 1952 The Pillar (also released as The Wire 1953)
  • 1953 Digby
  • 1955 Wee Geordie
  • 1956 Harry Black
  • 1957 Sandy was a Soldier's Boy
  • 1958 Harry Black and the Tiger
  • 1960 Where the High Winds Blow
  • 1962 Dragon Hill
  • 1962 Storm of Our Journey
  • 1963 Amanita Pestilens
  • 1964 Winter of Madness
  • 1965 Mallabec
  • 1966 Come Back, Geordie
  • 1968 Devil's Plunge (also released as Cab-Intersec)
  • 1969 Big Ben
  • 1969 Pirate Rock
  • 1972 The Lord's Pink Ocean
  • 1973 Black Dougal
  • 1976 Ash
  • 1977 Pot of Gold
  • 1984 Lean, Wind, Lean

Source: [Canadian Books and Authors]

References[edit]

  1. ^ A Granite-like Wedge of a Man - Spencer Tracy
  2. ^ Source: UNB Archives and Special Collections

External links[edit]