David Helwig


David Helwig was a Canadian editor, essayist, memoirist, novelist, poet, short story writer and translator.

Life and career

Helwig was born in Toronto, Ontario, where he spent his early childhood years. When he was ten years old, his family moved to Niagara-on-the-Lake, Ontario, where his father ran a small business repairing and refinishing furniture and buying and selling antiques. He earned a B.A. from the University of Toronto in 1960, and an M.A. from the University of Liverpool in 1962. He subsequently taught at Queen's University from 1962 to 1974. While he was at Queen's University, he also taught writing classes in Collins Bay Penitentiary. In 1972, he co-wrote A Book about Billie with an inmate of the prison.
In 1971, he founded and was long-time editor of the Best Canadian Stories anthology series for Oberon Press. From 1974 to 1976, he was the literary manager for CBC Television's drama department. In 1980, he retired from teaching and became a full-time writer.
His work includes a series of novels set in Kingston, Ontario, known as "The Kingston Novels": The Glass Knight, Jennifer, A Sound Like Laughter, and It is Always Summer. His best known poem, "Considerations", was published in Maclean's in 1970. His poetry collections have received numerous awards, including the CBC poetry award for Catchpenny Poems and the Atlantic Poetry Award for The Year One. As an adult, Helwig learned Russian and published two books of translations of short stories by Anton Chekhov which included About Love (short story).
From 1959 to 1991, he was married to actor/director/theatre manager Nancy Helwig, the mother of his two children, Maggie Helwig and Kate Helwig. He lived his later years in Belfast, Prince Edward Island with his second wife, Judy Gaudet. His daughter, Maggie Helwig, is a noted writer and social justice activist in Toronto.
In 2007, he received the Matt Cohen Award from the Writers' Trust of Canada in honor of his lifetime contribution to Canadian literature. On January 23, 2008, he was appointed Prince Edward Island's third Poet Laureate and on July 1, 2009 he was named a Member of the Order of Canada.
Helwig died on October 16, 2018, at the age of 80 at a hospital in Montague, Prince Edward Island.

Works by David Helwig

Poetry

Figures in a Landscape, 1968The Sign of the Gunman, 1969The Best Name of Silence, 1972Atlantic Crossings, 1974Book of the Hours, 1979The Rain Falls Like Rain, 1982Catchpenny Poems, 1983The Hundred Old Names, 1989The Beloved, 1992A Random Gospel, 1996This Human Day, 2000Telling Stories, 2000The Year One, 2004The Sway of Otherwise, 2008Seawrack, 2013Keeping Late Hours, 2015Sudden and Absolute Stranger, 2017A House in Memory: Last Poems, 2020

Fiction

The Streets of Summer, 1969 The Day Before Tomorrow, 1971 The Glass Knight, 1976Jennifer, 1979The King's Evil, 1981It Is Always Summer, 1982A Sound Like Laughter, 1983The Only Son, 1984The Bishop, 1986A Postcard from Rome, 1988Old Wars, 1989Of Desire, 1990Blueberry Cliffs, 1993 Just Say the Words, 1994Close to the Fire, 1999 The Time of Her Life, 2000The Stand-In, 2002 Duet, 2004 Saltsea, 2006Smuggling Donkeys, 2007 Coming Through, 2007 Mystery Stories, 2010 Killing McGee, 2011 Simon Says, 2012Clyde, 2014

Other

A Book About Billie, 1972 Last Stories of Anton Chekhov, 1991 The Child of Someone, 1997 Living Here, 2001 The Names of Things, 2006 About Love, 2012 The Essential Tom Marshall, 2012