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Linden Joseph MacIntyre (born May 29, 1943) is a Canadian journalist, broadcaster and novelist. He has won ten [ 2 ] Gemini Awards , an International Emmy and numerous other awards for writing and journalistic excellence, including the 2009 Scotiabank Giller Prize for his 2009 novel, The Bishop's Man .
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The Bishop's Man was Linden MacIntyre second novel. His previous novel, The Long Stretch, which was published ten years earlier, in 1999.At the time of the new novel's publication author Linden MacIntyre was 66 years old and living in Toronto with his wife, and fellow journalist and author, Carol Off.
Causeway: A Passage from Innocence is a non-fiction book, written by Canadian writer Linden MacIntyre, first published in August 2006 by HarperCollins. In the book, the author recounts the 1950s construction of the Canso Causeway, linking Cape Breton to mainland Nova Scotia. MacIntyre reflects on changing ways of life and his relationship with ...
Theresa Frances Veronica Burke is a Canadian writer, journalist and producer for the CBC's television newsmagazine, The Fifth Estate. [1] [2] She was born in Toronto.On May 20, 1999, Burke was on the telephone with bank robber Ty Conn, an escapee from the Kingston Penitentiary (one of Canada's most secure prisons) when he shot himself as the police were attempting his re-arrest. [3]
Linden MacIntyre: 1943 novelist, journalist The Bishop's Man, Causeway: Matthew MacKenzie: playwright Bears, The First Métis Man of Odesa: Rory Maclean: 1954 Hugh MacLennan: 1907 1990 novelist, essayist Two Solitudes, Barometer Rising: Matt MacLennan: Michael MacLennan: 1968 Alexander MacLeod: 1972 short stories Light Lifting: Alison MacLeod ...
Burke and journalist Linden MacIntyre, both associated with the television program The Fifth Estate, later published Who Killed Ty Conn (Viking Press Canada, 2000; [6] reissued 2011, Creative Book Publishing, St. John's [4]). MacIntyre had met and befriended Conn in 1994, during the course of researching an investigative story on the effects of ...
The Wake is a 2014 debut novel by British author Paul Kingsnorth. [1] Written in an imaginary language, a hybrid of Old English and Modern English, [2] [3] it tells of Buccmaster of Holland, [3] an Anglo-Saxon freeman forced to come to terms with the effects of the Norman Invasion of 1066, during which his wife and sons were killed. [4]