Michael Ondaatje
Canadian Writers from all across the Country
Michael's Biography
Sri Lankan Born Canadian Writer of The English Patient
poet, filmmaker, editor (b at Colombo, Ceylon [Sri
Lanka] 12 Sept 1943). Ondaatje's work often blends or counterposes the
factual and the imaginary, poetry and prose. His longer narrative works,
often based on the unorthodox lives of real people, may contain
documentary as well as fictional accounts. Ondaatje's imagery is
characterized by its preoccupation with romantic exoticism and
multiculturalism; its gravitation towards the bizarre, the exaggerated,
and the unlikely; its fascination with the secret codes of violence in
both personal and political life; and with its continued delving into
the world of movies, jazz and friendship. His work is also notable for
its cinematic qualities in its frequent use of montage techniques and
spare dramatic dialogue.
Ondaatje immigrated to Canada via England in 1962, and attended the
University of Toronto (BA) and Queen's (MA). His first books of poetry
include The Dainty Monsters (1967), The Man with Seven Toes (1969) and
Rat Jelly (1973). The Collected Works of Billy the Kid , an account of
the factual and fictional life of the notorious outlaw, won the Governor
General's Award in 1970 and has been adapted for stage and produced at
Stratford, Toronto and New York. Coming Through Slaughter (1976) tells
of real and imagined events in the life of New Orleans jazz cornetist
Buddy Bolden. His collection of poems (1963-78), There's a Trick with a
Knife I'm Learning to Do , won a second Governor General's Award in
1979. Running in the Family (1982) tells of the glamorous and
unconventional life of his parents and grandparents in colonial Ceylon.
Secular Love , a book of poems, was published in 1984.
In the Skin of a Lion , published in 1987, is a novel which takes place
in Toronto in the 1930s. The English Patient (1992) is Ondaatje's most
acclaimed novel to date. In addition to winning another Governor
General's Award for fiction in 1992, it earned Ondaatje a share of the
prestigious Booker Prize, the first ever awarded to a Canadian.
Ondaatje's films include Sons of Captain Poetry (about poet bp NICHOL),
Carry on Crime and Punishment , The Clinton Special (about Theatre Passe
Muraille's Farm Show) and Royal Canadian Hounds . His critical work on
Leonard COHEN was published in 1970, and as editor of Mongrel Broadsides
he published poems by James REANEY, Margaret ATWOOD and others. He has
also edited a collection about animals, The Broken Ark: A Book of Beasts
(1971); Personal Fictions: Stories by Munro, Wiebe, Thomas, and Blaise
(1977) and The Long Poem Anthology (1979). In 1971 Ondaatje began
teaching at York U.
Author: SHARON THESEN
1995 by McClelland & Stewart Inc.
Entry from The Canadian & World Encyclopedia ©McClelland & Stewart Inc.
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