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Who Has Seen the Wind

Penguin Modern Classics Edition

Who Has Seen the Wind( )
Author: Mitchell, W. O.
ISBN:978-0-7710-0731-6
Publication Date:Jun 2019
Publisher:McClelland & Stewart
Imprint:McClelland & Stewart
Book Format:Paperback
List Price:USD $15.00
Book Description:

Hailed as a great Canadian classic on boyhood, Who Has Seen the Wind evokes the sheer immensity of the prairie landscape, from the relentless wind to the far reaches of the bright blue sky. Like children everywhere, Brian O'Connal is a curious sort, and with enchanting naïveté he bestows his unforgettable perspective on everything from gophers to God, from his feisty Scottish grandmother to his friends Ben and Saint Sammy, the town of Arcola's local madman. This is no simple,...
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Book Details
Pages:400
Detailed Subjects: Fiction / Coming Of Age
Physical Dimensions (W X L X H):5.23 x 7.98 x 1.02 Inches
Book Weight:0.725 Pounds
Author Biography
Mitchell, W. O. (Author)
W.O. Mitchell, 1914 - Novelist and dramatist William Ormond Mitchell was born at Weyburn, Sask on March 13, 1914. Mitchell studied at U of Man and U of A. He was the fiction editor at Maclean's from 1948-1951. After 1968, he was writer-in-residence at the Banff Centre, U of C, U of A, and Massey College, Toronto. He was also at the University of Windsor from 1978-1987.

Mitchell's first novel, "Who Has Seen the Wind" (1947), received instant recognition. It features the characters, madman Saint Sammy, the ever-drunken Ben and tells of the boy Brian's initiation into the meaning of birth, death, life, freedom and justice. He uses the beauty and power of the prairie and the wind, to symbolize God. His second novel was "The Kite" (1962), which also concerned life and mortality. Another theme of initiation was found in "How I Spent My Summer Holidays" (1981) and takes the character Hugh from childhood innocence, into a world of betrayal, repression and violence and ends with Hugh as an old man left only with knowledge. In 1988, he published the suspense novel "Ladybug, Ladybug.." and followed with "Roses Are Difficult Here" in 1990.

Mitchell has also written many plays for radio and television. The early radio plays The Devil's Instrument (1949) and The Black Bonspiel of Wullie MacCrimmon (written 1951, published 1965) were later revised as full-length plays. Two other plays written for the stage were Back to Beulah, which won the Chalmers Award in 1976, and For Those in Peril on the Sea (1982). Jake and the Kid (1961) originated from stories written for Maclean's. Mitchell also experimented with a musical, Wild Rose, in 1967.

Mitchell became a Member of the Order of Canada in 1973, has received several honorary degrees and was the director of the Writing Division, Banff Centre from 1975-1985. He received the Stephen Leacock Award for "According to Jake and the Kid" (1989). In 1992, he became an honorary Member of the Privy Council.



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