Henry Kreisel

Canadian writer
The basics

Quick Facts

IntroCanadian writer
PlacesCanada
wasWriter
Work fieldLiterature
Gender
Male
Birth5 June 1922
Death22 April 1991 (aged 68 years)
The details

Biography

Henry Kreisel, OC (June 5, 1922 – April 22, 1991) was a Canadian writer of novels and essays.
Kreisel was born in Vienna, Austria to a Polish-born mother and a Romanian-born father.[1] The family, which was Jewish, managed to reach Britain just before the Second World War, but, like many other German-speaking refugees, they were declared enemy aliens after the war began.
In 1940 Kreisel was relocated to Canada. He lived on a farm in New Brunswick until 1941 [2]. It was there that he began his career as a writer, deciding to write in English and modelling himself on the bilingual author Joseph Conrad. After Canada decided to release the refugees from the camps they had been assigned to Kreisel decided to pursue his dream of writing and was educated at the University of Toronto.
Kreisel became one of the first Jewish writers to write about Jewish-Canadian issues. Later he spent time in Western Canada, and his essay "The Prairie: A State of Mind" is a frequently anthologized discussion of Western Canadian regionalism.
He was made an Officer of the Order of Canada in 1987.

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