Morley Callaghan


Edward Morley Callaghan was a Canadian novelist, short story writer, playwright, and TV and radio personality.

Biography

Of Canadian/English-immigrant parentage, Callaghan was born and raised in Toronto, Ontario. In his youth, he played baseball for Canadian Sports Hall of Fame coach, Bob Abate, and pitched for Abate's Arlington baseball team. He was educated at Withrow PS, Riverdale Collegiate Institute, the University of Toronto and Osgoode Hall Law School. He articled and was called to the Bar, but did not practice law. During the 1920s he worked at the Toronto Star where he became friends with a fellow reporter Ernest Hemingway, formerly of The Kansas City Star. Callaghan began writing stories that were well received and soon were recognized as one of the best short story writers of the day. In 1929 he spent some months in Paris, where he was part of the great gathering of writers in Montparnasse that included Ernest Hemingway, Ezra Pound, Gertrude Stein, F. Scott Fitzgerald, and James Joyce.
Callaghan's novels and short stories are marked by undertones of Roman Catholicism, often focusing on individuals whose essential characteristic is a strong but often weakened sense of self. His first novel was Strange Fugitive ; several short stories, novellas, and novels followed. Callaghan published little between 1937 and 1950 - an artistically dry period. However, during these years, many non-fiction articles were written in various periodicals such as New World, and National Home Monthly. Luke Baldwin's Vow, a slim novel about a boy and his dog, was originally published in a 1947 edition of Saturday Evening Post and soon became a juvenile classic read in school rooms around the world. The Loved and the Lost won the Governor General's Award. Callaghan's later works include, among others, The Many Colored Coat, A Passion in Rome, A Fine and Private Place, A Time for Judas, Our Lady of the Snows. His last novel was A Wild Old Man on the Road. Publications of short stories have appeared in The Lost and Found Stories of Morley Callaghan and in The New Yorker Stories. The four-volume The Complete Stories collects for the first time 90 of his stories.
Callaghan was also a contributor to The New Yorker, Harper's Bazaar, Maclean's, Esquire, Cosmopolitan, Saturday Evening Post, Yale Review, New World, Performing Arts in Canada, and Twentieth Century Literature.
Callaghan married Loretto Dee, with whom he had two sons: Michael and Barry, a poet and author in his own right. Barry Callaghan's memoir Barrelhouse Kings, examines his career and that of his father. After outliving most of his contemporaries, Callaghan died after a brief illness in Toronto at the age of 87. He was interred in Mount Hope Catholic Cemetery in Ontario.

Recognition

Callaghan was awarded the Royal Society of Canada's Lorne Pierce Medal in 1960. In 1982 he was made a Companion of the Order of Canada.
Morley Callaghan is the subject of a CBC Television Life and Times episode, and the CBC mini-series, Hemingway Vs. Callaghan, which first aired in March 2003.
From 1951 until he died in 1990, the author had lived in the Rosedale, Toronto area, at 20 Dale Avenue. A historic plaque at the nearby Glen Road footbridge summarizes Callaghan's noteworthy writing career and the most significant of his literary contemporaries, including Ernest Hemingway and F Scott Fitzgerald.

Commemorative postage stamp

On September 8, 2003, to commemorate the 50th anniversary of the National Library of Canada, Canada Post released a special commemorative series, "The Writers of Canada", with a design by Katalina Kovats, featuring two English-Canadian and two French-Canadian stamps. Three million stamps were issued. Callaghan was chosen for one of the English-Canadian stamps.

Novels

Strange Fugitive - 1928It's Never Over - 1930A Broken Journey - 1932Such Is My Beloved - 1934They Shall Inherit the Earth - 1935More Joy in Heaven - 1937The Loved and the Lost - 1951The Many Colored Coat - 1960 A Passion in Rome - 1961A Fine and Private Place - 1975A Time for Judas - 1983Our Lady of the Snows - 1985 A Wild Old Man on the Road - 1988

Novellas

No Man's Meat - 1931Luke Baldwin's Vow - 1948 The Varsity Story - 1948An Autumn Penitent - 1973 Close to the Sun Again - 1977No Man's Meat and The Enchanted Pimp - 1978

Short fiction

A Native Argosy - 1929Now That April's Here and Other Stories - 1936Morley Callaghan's Stories - 1959Stories - 1967The Lost and Found Stories of Morley Callaghan - 1985The Morley Callaghan Reader - 1997The New Yorker Stories - 2001The Complete Stories - 2003Ancient Lineage and Other Stories - 2012
  • The Snob
  • The Sentimentalists

Non-fiction

That Summer in Paris: Memories of Tangled Friendships with Hemingway, Fitzgerald and Some Others - 1963Winter - 1974

Plays

Turn Again Home Just Ask George To Tell the Truth Season of the Witch - 1976

Film adaptations

Books

  • Boire, Gary A., Morley Callaghan and His Works - 1990
  • Boire, Gary A., Morley Callaghan: Literary Anarchist - 1994
  • Cameron, Donald, Conversations with Canadian Novelists, Part Two - 1973Contemporary Literary Criticism, Volume 3 - 1975Contemporary Literary Criticism, Volume 14 - 1980Contemporary Literary Criticism, Volume 41 - 1987Contemporary Literary Criticism, Volume 65 - 1991Dictionary of Literary Biography, Volume 68: Canadian Writers, 1920–1959, First Series - 1988
  • Morley, Patricia, Morley Callaghan - 1978
  • Orange, John, Orpheus in Winter: Morley Callaghan's The Loved and the Lost - 1993
  • Sutherland, Fraser, The Style of Innocence - 1972
  • Wilson, Edmund, O Canada - 1965
  • Woodcock, George, Moral Predicament: Morley Callaghan's More Joy in Heaven - 1993

Periodicals

Books in Canada, April, 1986, pp. 32–33.Canadian Forum, March, 1960; February, 1968.Canadian Literature, summer, 1964Canadian Literature, winter, 1984, pp. 66–69.Canadian Literature, autumn, 1990, pp. 148–49.Dalhousie Review, autumn, 1959.Essays on Canadian Writing, winter, 1984–85, pp. 309– 15Essays on Canadian Writing, summer, 1990, pp. 16–20.Form and Century, April, 1934.New Republic, February 9, 1963.New Yorker, November 26, 1960.Queen's Quarterly, autumn, 1957Queen's Quarterly, autumn, 1989, pp. 717–19.Saturday Night, October, 1983, pp. 73–74.Tamarack Review, winter, 1962.American Spectator, February, 1991.