Robertson Davies lists Joyce's "Ulysses" among the books that have most inspired him and to which he most often returns.
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The San Francisco Chronicle reviewer claims that PILGRIM is "both profound and entertaining in a way that recalls the engaging wit of Robertson Davies."
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"Robertson Davies, regarded by many as the premier Canadian man of letters of his era, was an intellectual man for all seasons. Author, wit, actor, teacher, critic, playwright, he was sometimes referred to as a Canadian throwback to Samuel Johnson..."
"I want to reach people. I want them to hear what I have to say, because I think that it is of interest and of value, and therefore I exert myself to amuse them....I try to write books that people like to read and not just puzzles. I've tried to make my books that people can read with pleasure, and not just to hammer them over the head and lecture them."
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Davies was born in a small Canadian town that he later drew on when he created the town of Deptford in his famous trilogy. The son of a senator, he studied literature both in his native Canada and at Oxford, where he received a B.Lit. in 1938 with a thesis on Shakespeare's boy actors. After university, he worked in the theater--as an actor and also behind the scenes--including a stint at the Old Vic, and remained infatuated with it all his life. Several of his plays were produced upon his return more...
Davies was born in a small Canadian town that he later drew on when he created the town of Deptford in his famous trilogy. The son of a senator, he studied literature both in his native Canada and at Oxford, where he received a B.Lit. in 1938 with a thesis on Shakespeare's boy actors. After university, he worked in the theater--as an actor and also behind the scenes--including a stint at the Old Vic, and remained infatuated with it all his life. Several of his plays were produced upon his return to Canada, though they were never as well-received as his novels, and he was an important figure in the founding of the world-renowned Stratford Festival in Ontario. In 1942, he turned to journalism, and was, in turn, a writer, editor, and publisher for the Peterborouth (Ontario) Examiner, where he also served as a columnist under the name Samuel Marchbanks, whose humorous essays were later collected in three volumes. Beginning in 1960, Davies taught at the University of Toronto, and in 1961 was appointed Master of Massey College there, a post he retained until his retirement in 1981. He published criticism, essays, and--of course--fiction, beginning with TEMPEST-TOST (1951) and ending with THE CUNNING MAN (1994). Davies was a fundamentally shy and modest man who delighted in also being a bit of a mystery; he kept his private life largely to himself. He was married to Brenda Mathews, an Englishwoman he worked with at the Old Vic in London, and they had a daughter, Rosamond. When Davies died, at 82, of a sudden heart attack, he was writing an opera and planning a book on old age. less...
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08/28/1913 Ontario, Canada,
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