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{{dablink|This article is about the writer. For information about the Fiction Factory singer see [[Kevin Patterson (singer)]].}}
{{dablink|This article is about the writer. For information about the Fiction Factory singer see [[Kevin Patterson (singer)]].}}



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'''Kevin Patterson''' (born [[December 27]], [[1964]] in [[Kapuskasing, Ontario]]) is a [[Canada|Canadian]] [[medical doctor]] and literary writer. His short story collection, ''Country of Cold,'' won the [[Rogers Writers' Trust Fiction Prize]] in [[2003]].
'''Kevin Patterson''' (born [[December 27]], [[1964]] in [[Kapuskasing, Ontario]]) is a [[Canada|Canadian]] [[medical doctor]] and literary writer. His short story collection, ''Country of Cold,'' won the [[Rogers Writers' Trust Fiction Prize]] in [[2003]].

Revision as of 19:25, 16 March 2008


Kevin Patterson (born December 27, 1964 in Kapuskasing, Ontario) is a Canadian medical doctor and literary writer. His short story collection, Country of Cold, won the Rogers Writers' Trust Fiction Prize in 2003.

Patterson grew up in Selkirk, Manitoba. He put himself through medical school at the University of Manitoba in Winnipeg by enlisting in the Canadian army. When his service was up, he worked as a doctor in the Arctic and on the coast of British Columbia while pursuing his MFA in creative writing. In 1999, Patterson published The Water in Between, a travel memoir of his sailing expedition in the Pacific Ocean.

His first novel, Consumption, was published in September of 2006 in Canada, and is scheduled for publication in 2007 in the United States. He co-edited Outside the Wire: The War in Afghanistan in the Words of its Participants, which was released in January 2008.

Talk to Me Like My Father

"Talk to Me Like My Father", Patterson's account of spending six weeks as a doctor with NATO forces in Afghanistan in the winter of 2007, was published in the July-August issue of Mother Jones magazine in the U.S. The article created news headlines in Canada because of Patterson's graphic description of the dying moments of Nova Scotia-born soldier Kevin Megeney.

Although Megeney's name had previously been published in Canadian media, the Canadian Department of National Defence initiated a military police investigation into Patterson's conduct to determine whether or not he breached doctor-patient confidentiality. He was later cleared when the DND received confirmation from Megeney's mother that she had consented to the publication of the article.

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