Cary Fagan
Quick Facts
Biography
Cary Fagan (born 1957) is a Canadian writer of novels, short stories, and children's books. His widely praised adult novel, A Bird's Eye, was shortlisted for the 2013 Rogers Writers' Trust Fiction Prize. Previously, his novel Valentine's Fall was nominated for the 2010 Toronto Book Award. Since publishing his first original children's book in 2001, he has published 21 children's titles.
Personal life
Fagan was born in 1957 in Toronto, Ontario. He grew up in the Toronto suburbs and attended the University of Toronto, graduating with a degree in English and winning eight student awards. He has lived for short periods in London and New York City, and now lives in Toronto. He is married to Rebecca Comay, a member of the philosophy department at the University of Toronto. He has two daughters and two step-sons. Along with Bernard Kelly, he co-publishes and edits a small press, paperplates books.
Fagan has received a Toronto Book Award, two Jewish Book Awards, and a Mr Christie silver medal.
Prizes and honours
- 1994 Jewish Book Award for Fiction (The Animals' Waltz)
- 2004 World Storytelling Award (U.S.) (The Market Wedding)
- 2009 Quill & Quire Book of the Year (Jacob Two-Two on the High Seas)
- 2013 Marilyn Baillie Picture Book Award (Mr. Zinger's Hat)
- 2014 Vicki Metalf Award for Children's Literature (body of work)
- Runners-up, etc
- 1990 Finalist, Toronto Book Awards (City Hall and Mrs. God)
- 2000 Sydney Taylor Honor Book (U.S.) (The Market Wedding)
- 2004 Silver Birch Award Honour Book (The Fortress of Kaspar Snit)
- 2008 Finalist, TD Canadian Children’s Literature Award (Thing-Thing)
- 2008 Silver Birch Express Award Honour Book (Ten Lessons for Kaspar Snit)
- 2008 Finalist, Marilyn Baillie Picture Book Award (Thing-Thing)
- 2010 Finalist, Toronto Book Awards (Valentine's Fall)
- 2012 Longlist, Scotiabank Giller Prize (My Life Among the Apes)
- 2013 Finalist, Rogers Writers Trust Fiction Prize ("A Bird's Eye")
- 2015 Finalist, John Spray Mystery Award ("The Show to End all Shows")
Published books
Novels for adults
- The Animals' Waltz: a novel (Lester & Orpen Dennys, 1994)
- Sleeping Weather (Porcupine's Quill, 1997)
- Felix Roth (Stoddart Books, 1999)
- The Mermaid of Paris (Key Porter Books, 2003)
- Valentine's Fall (Cormorant Books, 2010)
- A Bird's Eye (House of Anansi, 2013)
Children's fiction
- Gogol's Coat (Tundra Books, 1999), illustrated by Regolo Ricci, adapted from "The Overcoat" by Gogol
- The Market Wedding (Tundra, 2000), illus. Regolo Ricci, from Abraham Cahan
- Daughter of the Great Zandini (Tundra, 2001), illus. Cybèle Young
- Beyond the Dance: A Ballerina's Life (Tundra, 2002), by Fagan and Chan Hon Goh, autobiographical
- The Fortress of Kaspar Snit (Tundra, 2004), novel
- Ten Old Men and a Mouse (Tundra, 2007), illus. Gary Clement
- My New Shirt (Tundra, 2007), illus. Dušan Petričić
- Directed by Kaspar Snit (Tundra, 2007), sequel novel
- Mr. Karp's Last Glass (Tundra, 2007), illus. Selçuk Demirel
- Ten Lessons for Kaspar Snit (Tundra, 2008), sequel novel
- Thing-Thing (Tundra, 2008), illus. Nicolas Debon
- Jacob Two-Two on the High Seas (Tundra, 2009), illus. Dušan Petričić
- Book of Big Brothers (Groundwood Books, 2010), illus. Luc Melanson
- The Big Swim (Groundwood, 2010), novel
- Banjo of Destiny (Groundwood, 2011), illus. Selçuk Demirel
- Ella May and the Wishing Stone (Tundra, 2011), illus. Geneviève Côté
- Mr. Zinger's Hat (Tundra, 2012), illus. Dušan Petričić
- The Boy in the Box (Penguin Canada, 2012), novel; Master Melville's Medicine Show, book 1
- Danny, Who Fell in a Hole (Groundwood, 2013), illus. Milan Pavlovic
- Oy, Feh, So (Groundwood, 2013), illus. Gary Clement
- I Wish I Could Draw (Groundwood, 2014), "words and (bad) pictures by Cary Fagan", OCLC 881253673
Short stories
- History Lessons (Hounslow, 1990)
- The Little Black Dress: tales from France (Mercury Press, 1993)
- The Doctor’s House and other Fiction (Stoddart, 2000)
- My Life Among the Apes (Cormorant, 2012)
Non-fiction
- City Hall and Mrs. God: A Passionate Journey Through a Changing Toronto (Mercury Press, 1990)