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Farley Mowat

Farley McGill Mowat, OC (May 12, 1921 – May 6, 2014) was a Canadian writer and environmentalist. His works were translated into 52 languages, and he sold more than 17 million books. He achieved fame with the publication of his books on the Canadian north, such as People of the Deer (1952) and Never Cry Wolf (1963).[2] The latter, an account of his experiences with wolves in the Arctic, was made into a film of the same name released in 1983. For his body of work as a writer he won the annual Vicky Metcalf Award for Children's Literature in 1970.[3]

Farley Mowat

Mowat in 1993
BornFarley McGill Mowat
(1921-05-12)May 12, 1921
Belleville, Ontario, Canada
DiedMay 6, 2014(2014-05-06) (aged 92)
Cobourg, Ontario, Canada
Resting placePort Hope, Ontario
OccupationAuthor, soldier, environmentalist, naturalist, philanthropist
LanguageEnglish
NationalityCanadian
EducationBiology
Alma materUniversity of Toronto
Period1952–2014
GenreMemoir, Young adult fiction, Non-fiction
SubjectEnvironmentalism, Northern Canada
Notable worksNever Cry Wolf, People of the Deer, Lost in the Barrens, The Curse of the Viking Grave, The Grey Seas Under, Owls in the Family
SpouseFrances (Thornhill) Mowat, Claire (Wheeler) Mowat[1]
ChildrenRobert Mowat, David Mowat
RelativesJohn Mowat, John Bower Mowat, John McDonald Mowat, Angus McGill Mowat, Sir Oliver Mowat
Website
farleymowat.ca

Mowat's advocacy for environmental causes earned him praise, but his admission, after some of his books' claims had been debunked, that he "never let the facts get in the way of the truth" [4] earned harsh criticism.[2] Descriptions of Mowat refer to his "commitment to ideals" and "poetic descriptions and vivid images" as well as his strong antipathies, which provoke "ridicule, lampoons and, at times, evangelical condemnation".[2]

Early life and education edit

Mowat was born May 12, 1921, in Belleville, Ontario,[5] and grew up in Richmond Hill, Ontario.[6] His great-great-uncle was Ontario premier Sir Oliver Mowat,[5] and his father, Angus Mowat, was a librarian, who fought in the Battle of Vimy Ridge. His mother was Helen Lilian Thomson, daughter of Henry Andrew Hoffman Thomson and Georgina Phillips Farley Thomson of Trenton, Ontario. Mowat started writing, in his words "mostly verse", when his family lived in Windsor from 1930 to 1933.[2]

In the 1930s, the Mowat family moved to Saskatoon, Saskatchewan,[5] where as a teenager Mowat wrote about birds in a column for the Saskatoon Star-Phoenix. During this time, he also wrote his own nature newsletter, Nature Lore.[6] In the 1930s, Mowat studied zoology at the University of Toronto but never completed a degree.[1] He took his first collecting expedition in the summer of 1939 to Saskatoon with fellow zoology student Frank Banfield, who collected data regarding mammals while Mowat focused on birds. They sold their collections to the Royal Ontario Museum to finance their trip.[1]: 219  Before enlisting, Banfield published his field notes in the Canadian Field-Naturalist. Mowat published his when he returned from World War II.

War service edit

During World War II, Mowat joined the Canadian Army and was commissioned as a second lieutenant into the Second Battalion, The Hastings and Prince Edward Regiment (affectionately known as the Hasty Ps) on 19 July 1940.[7] He went overseas as a reinforcement officer for that regiment, joining the Canadian Army in the United Kingdom. On July 10, 1943, he was a subaltern in command of a rifle platoon and participated in Operation Husky, the Allied invasion of Sicily.[8]

Mowat served throughout the campaign as a platoon commander and moved to Italy[6] in September 1943, seeing further combat until December 1943. During the Moro River Campaign, part of the Italian Campaign, he suffered from battle stress, heightened after an incident on Christmas Day outside of Ortona, Italy, when he was left weeping at the feet of an unconscious friend, Lieutenant Allan (Al) Park, who had an enemy bullet in his head.[9] He then accepted a job as an intelligence officer at battalion headquarters, later moving to brigade headquarters. He stayed in Italy with the 1st Canadian Infantry Division for most of the war and was eventually promoted to captain.

Mowat moved with the division to northwest Europe in early 1945. There, he worked as an intelligence officer in the Netherlands and went through enemy lines to start unofficial negotiations about food drops with General Blaskowitz which evolved into face-to-face talks between senior Canadian commanders and the Nazi occupation regime. The food drops, under the codename Operation Manna, saved thousands of Dutch lives.[10]

Mowat also formed the 1st Canadian Army Museum Collection Team,[11] according to his book My Father's Son, and arranged for the transport to Canada of several tons of German military equipment, including a V2 rocket and several armoured vehicles. Some of these vehicles are on display today at Canadian Forces Base Borden's tank museum,[12] as well as the Canadian War Museum in Ottawa.[13][14]

Mowat was discharged at the end of World War II, as a captain and was considered for promotion to major. However, he declined the offer as it would have required his volunteering to stay in the military until "no longer needed", which Mowat assumed meant duty with the Canadian Army Occupation Force (CAOF) (but might also have meant the conclusion of the war with Japan).[15] He was entitled to the following medals as a result of his service: the 1939–1945 Star, the Italy Star, the France and Germany Star, the Defence Medal, the Canadian Volunteer Service Medal and the War Medal 1939–1945.

Post-war edit

In 1947, Mowat was hired as field technician for American naturalist Francis Harper's study of the barren-ground caribou in the Nueltin Lake area—now Nunavut's Kivalliq Region,[16] resulting in the publication of Harper's book entitled Caribou of Keewatin.[17] Two young Inuit were with them, fifteen-year-old Inuk Luke Anoteelik (Luke Anowtalik) and his sister Rita, who were the sole survivors of starvation in an Inuit village.[18] Luke Anowtalik went on to become well known for his distinctive carvings of antler and bone that are now in the permanent collection of the National Gallery of Canada.[19][20] Due to a clash of personalities, Mowat undertook his own explorations. "Harper later extracted a promise that neither would mention the other in their respective future writing, a promise also extracted from Mowat by later field companions for their lifetimes."[1]

In the late 1940s, Mowat was hired by Frank Banfield—then Chief Mammalogist of the newly formed Canadian Wildlife Service—as field assistant in Banfield's ambitious multi-year investigation of the barren-ground caribou,[21][22][23] which resulted in Banfield's influential 1951 publication entitled "The Barren-ground Caribou."[24] Mowat, who was part of a four-researcher team, was fired by the chief of Canadian Wildlife Service because of complaints from the local population and lack of formal approval for some activities.[1]

Literary career edit

After serving in World War II, Mowat attended the University of Toronto.[25] Mowat's first book, People of the Deer (1952), was inspired by a field trip to the Canadian Arctic he made while studying at the University of Toronto. Mowat was outraged at the conditions endured by the Inuit living in Northern Canada. The book turned Mowat into a controversial, popular figure.[5]

Mowat became a McClelland and Stewart author when they published his book entitled The Regiment in 1955.[26] Jack McClelland, known for his promotion of Canadian authors, became his lifelong friend as well as his publisher. Mowat's next book, (a children's book) Lost in the Barrens (1956), won a Governor General's Award.[2][27]

In 1963, Mowat wrote a possibly fictionalised account of his experiences in the Canadian Arctic with Arctic wolves entitled Never Cry Wolf (1963), which is thought to have been instrumental in changing popular attitudes towards the animals.[4]

In 1985, Mowat started a book tour of the United States to promote Sea of Slaughter. He was denied entry by customs agents at Pearson International Airport in Toronto, which was justified by laws that allowed American customs officials to deny entry to entrants they thought were "Communist sympathizers". Believing gun lobbyists were behind his denial, he came forward with his suspicion. The law was overturned in 1990, and Mowat wrote about his experience in My Discovery of America (1985).[28]

Mowat became very interested in Dian Fossey, the American ethologist who studied gorillas and was brutally murdered in Rwanda in 1985. His biography of her was published in 1987, in Canada under the title Virunga: The Passion of Dian Fossey, and in the United States as Woman in the Mists: The Story of Dian Fossey and the Mountain Gorillas of Africa—an allusion to Fossey's own recounting of her life and research Gorillas in the Mist (1983).

Many of Mowat's works are autobiographical, such as Owls in the Family (1962, about his childhood), The Boat Who Wouldn't Float (1969, one of three books about his time living in Newfoundland), and And No Birds Sang (1979, about his experience fighting in Italy in World War II).[2]

In 1965, Westviking was published, followed 30 years later by The Farfarers, which suggests a people he called the Albans preceded the Norse to the High Arctic and the Labrador and Newfoundland coasts.

Criticism edit

In a 1964 book review published in Canadian Field-Naturalist,[29] Frank Banfield of the National Museum of Canada, a former Canadian Wildlife Service scientist, compared Mowat's 1963 bestseller to Little Red Riding Hood, stating, "I hope that readers of Never Cry Wolf will realize that both stories have about the same factual content."[29] Mowat responded to Banfield's criticisms in a letter to the editor of the Canadian Field-Naturalist and signed it "Mowat's wolf Uncle Albert".[30] L. David Mech, a wolf expert, is cited by Warner Shedd, a former regional executive of the National Wildlife Federation, as noting that no scientist, Mowat notwithstanding, has ever encountered a wolf population that primarily subsists on small prey, as claimed in Mowat's book. Mech additionally states, "...Mowat is not a scientist, and his book, although presented as truth, is fiction."[31]

The New York Times Book Review published a dismissive review of People of the Deer on February 24, 1952.[32] The Beaver was quite hostile in its first review. The second review, by A. E. Porsild, was equally hostile, questioning the existence of the Ihalmiut.[33] Despite a few harsh reviews, however, People of the Deer was generally well received, published in the Atlantic Monthly and "showered with glowing international reviews."[34]

Duncan Pryde, a Hudson's Bay Company trader who pioneered the linguistic study of Inuit languages, attacked Mowat's claim to have picked up the language quickly enough in two months to discuss detailed concepts such as shamanism, pointing out that the language is complex and required a year or more for Europeans to master the basics. Pryde said that when Mowat visited his post at Baker Lake in 1958, 10 years after Mowat's earlier trip, he could barely speak a single word in the Inuit language.[35]

Canadian Geographic published excerpts from The Farfarers with the comment that it was "a highly speculative blend of history and archeology. In it, Mowat again draws upon Norse sagas, the chronicles of Irish monks, and accounts of Roman travellers, as well as the works of modern historians and archeologists. It is both detailed and, as with all early history, sketchy. The written record for much of the period covered is scant and the archeological record spotty. Still, such speculative writing can suggest avenues of exploration and study for future researchers. No professional archeologists are known to share Mowat's theories but that does not disturb him. A literary gadfly for much of his long career, Mowat is happy to stir up debate and challenge academics to match the visions that he champions and defends with such vigour and relish."[36]

Awards and honours edit

  • 1950s: Mowat won two Canadian "year's best" book awards for Lost in the Barrens, (Little, Brown, 1956), an adventure novel set in Northern Manitoba and southwestern North West Territories—namely, the Governor General's Award for Juvenile Fiction for 1956[37] and the 1958 Canadian Library Association Book of the Year for Children Award.[38] In 1952, Mowat won the University of Western Ontario's President's Medal for best short story for "Eskimo Spring". In 1953, People of the Deer was awarded the Anisfield-Wolf Book Award by the Anisfield–Wolf Foundation. In 1956, Mowat won the Governor General's Award. And in 1957, the Book of the Year Award, Canadian Association of Children's Librarians, for Lost in the Barrens.[39] Also, in 1958, Mowat won the Canadian Women's Clubs Award for children's book The Dog Who Wouldn't Be and the Hans Christian Andersen International Award.
  • 1960s: In 1962, he won the Boys' Clubs of America Junior Book Award for Owls in the Family. In 1963, he won the National Association of Independent Schools Award. In 1965, he made the Hans Christian Andersen Honours List, for juvenile books.[39]
  • 1970s: In 1970, The Boat Who Wouldn't Float won the Stephen Leacock Memorial Medal for Humour and in 1972, it made the L'Etoile de la Mer Honours List.[39] Mowat also won the Vicky Metcalf Award, 1970;[39] Mark Twain Award, 1971;[39] and the Curran Award, 1977, for "contributions to understanding wolves".[39]
  • 1980s: He was given the Knight of Mark Twain distinction in 1980.[39] In 1985, he received the Author's Award, Foundation for the Advancement of Canadian Letters for Sea of Slaughter. In 1988, Virunga was designated Book of the Year, Foundation for the Advancement of Canadian Letters, and Mowat was named Author of the Year by the Canadian Booksellers Association. In 1989, he won the Gemini Award for best documentary script, for The New North.
  • 1990s: In 1991, the Council of Canadians presented him with the Back the Nation Award.[39]
  • 2000s: In 2002, the Sea Shepherd Conservation Society ship RV Farley Mowat (formerly M/Y Sea Shepherd III / M/Y Ocean Warrior) was named in his honour. Mowat frequently visited it to assist its mission and provided financial support to the group. In 2005, Mowat received the first and only Lifetime Achievement Award from the National Outdoor Book Award.[40] On June 8, 2010, it was announced that Mowat would receive a star on Canada's Walk of Fame.[27][41]
  • 2010s: In 2014, only weeks after his death, a life-sized sculpture of Farley Mowat, commissioned by Toronto businessman Ron Rhodes and executed by the Canadian artist George Bartholomew Boileau, was unveiled at the University of Saskatchewan, located in Saskatoon, where Farley spent many of his formative years. His wife Claire was in attendance. Mowat had seen the finished clay, in the artist's studio, several months previously.

Mowat was made an Officer of the Order of Canada in 1981. He had previously been awarded both the Canadian Centennial Medal (1967) and the Queen Elizabeth II Silver Jubilee Medal (1977).[27][42]

As an Order of Canada recipient, he automatically qualified for the 125th Anniversary of the Confederation of Canada Medal (1992), the Queen Elizabeth II Golden Jubilee Medal (2002), and the Queen Elizabeth II Diamond Jubilee Medal (2012).

(ribbon bar, as it would look at the date of his death, including war service medals)

       

       

       

Farley is also the namesake of the lovable sheepdog in the comic strip by Lynn Johnston, For Better or For Worse. Johnston and Mowat were long-time friends.[43]

Honorary doctorates edit

Affiliations edit

Mowat was a strong supporter of the Green Party of Canada and a close friend of the party's leader Elizabeth May. The Green Party sent a direct mail fundraising appeal in Mowat's name in June 2007, and that same year Mowat became a patron of the Nova Scotia Nature Trust by donating over 200 acres (0.81 km2) of his land in Cape Breton Island to the Nature Trust. He was also an honorary director of the North American Native Plant Society.[44] Mowat was described as "a life-long socialist."[45]

Farley Mowat Library edit

In 2012, independent Canadian publisher Douglas & McIntyre announced they had created the Farley Mowat Library series and would be re-releasing many of his most popular titles, with new designs and introductions, in print and e-book format.[46]

Mowat's archives are held at the William Ready Division of Archives and Research Collections at McMaster University, in Hamilton, Ontario.

Later life edit

 
Mowat in 2010

Mowat and his second wife Claire spent their later years together in Port Hope, Ontario, and their summers on a farm on Cape Breton Island.[47] They attended a local Anglican church in Port Hope about monthly, Claire emphasizing that Mowat was more spiritual than religious, and Mowat stating that he probably believed in God the same way his dog did, and that such ceremonies were important in tying people to each other and the world.[48]

Mowat is considered a saint by the God's Gardeners, a fictional religious sect that is the focus of Margaret Atwood's 2009 novel The Year of the Flood.[49][50]

 
Mowat's grave site

Mowat died on May 6, 2014, less than one week before his 93rd birthday.[6][51] He maintained his interest in Canada's wilderness areas throughout his life and could be heard a few days before his death on the CBC Radio One program The Current speaking against the provision of Wi-Fi service in national parks.[52] He is buried at the historic St. Mark's Anglican Church cemetery in Port Hope.[53][54]

Works edit

The Top of the World Trilogy

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e Cook, Francis R., "Obituary – Farley Mowat 1921–2014", Canadian Field-Naturalist, 128, retrieved November 1, 2014
  2. ^ a b c d e f Gerald J. Rubio. "Farley Mowat". The Canadian Encyclopedia. Retrieved September 4, 2019.
  3. ^ "Vicky Metcalf Award for Literature for Young People". Awards. Writers Trust of Canada (writerstrust.com). Retrieved 2015-08-20. With linked guidelines and list of winners.
  4. ^ a b Burgess, Steve (May 11, 1999). . Salon.com. Archived from the original on January 11, 2006. Retrieved March 24, 2006.
  5. ^ a b c d Sandra Martin (May 7, 2014). "Acclaimed Canadian author Farley Mowat dead at 92". The Globe and Mail. Retrieved September 4, 2019.
  6. ^ a b c d Rinehart, Dianne (May 7, 2014). "Farley Mowat, acclaimed Canadian author, dead at 92". Toronto Star. Retrieved May 7, 2014.
  7. ^ "The Canada Gazette". The Canada Gazette. Vol. 74, no. 21. November 23, 1940. p. 1772.
  8. ^ And No Birds Sang, p. 7
  9. ^ And No Birds Sang, p. 259
  10. ^ CBC Radio Canada International
  11. ^ . Archived from the original on November 4, 2015. Retrieved November 11, 2015.
  12. ^ "My Fathers Son CL". Publishers Weekly. January 4, 1993. Retrieved May 9, 2014.
  13. ^ Ottawa Citizen: Andrew King, November 7, 2014
  14. ^ Legion Magazine, September 2014
  15. ^ My Father's Son, p. 359
  16. ^ Harper 1955.
  17. ^ Harper, Francis (October 21, 1955), Hall, E. Raymond (ed.), Caribou of Keewatin, Kansas: Museum of Natural Science via Gutenberg Press, p. 164
  18. ^ Kuehl, Gerald (2002), "Luke Anowtalik", Portraits of the North, retrieved November 2, 2014
  19. ^ Luke Anowtalik, Inuit, Arviat, Nunavut Territory, Canada (1932–2006), Vancouver, BC, retrieved November 2, 2014
  20. ^ Hessel, Ingo (Winter 1990), "Arviat Stone Sculpture: Born of the Struggle with an Uncompromising Medium", Inuit Art Quarterly: 4–15
  21. ^ Burnett, J. Alexander (November 1, 2002). "Working with Mammals (1962–67) Building a National Wildlife Program". A Passion for Wildlife: The History of the Canadian Wildlife Service. Vancouver, British Columbia: UBC Press. pp. 96–128. ISBN 9780774842525.
  22. ^ Burnett, J. Alexander (January–March 1999), "A Passion for Wildlife: A History of the Canadian Wildlife Service, 1947–1997", The Canadian Field-Naturalist, Sackville, New Brunswick, Canada, 113 (1): 183
  23. ^ Sandlos, John (November 1, 2011), Hunters at the Margin: Native People and Wildlife Conservation in the Northwest Territories, Vancouver: University of British Columbia Press, p. 360
  24. ^ Banfield, Frank (1951a), The barren-ground caribou, Ottawa, Ontario: Canada Department of Resources and Development, pp. 56 + vi
  25. ^ Kennedy, John R. (May 7, 2014). "Canadian author Farley Mowat dies at 92". Global News. Retrieved May 8, 2014.
  26. ^ Thomson, Donna, The Boat Who Wouldn't Float – The Happy Adventure of Farley Mowat and Jack McClelland, McMaster University
  27. ^ a b c "Remembering Farley Mowat". CBC Books. May 7, 2014. Retrieved May 9, 2014.
  28. ^ Martin, Sandra (May 7, 2014). "Scarred by war, acclaimed author Farley Mowat spent his life trying to save animals, nature and First Nations". The Globe and Mail. Retrieved May 8, 2014.
  29. ^ a b Banfield, A.W.F. (1964). "Book Review: 'Never Cry Wolf' by Farley Mowat. 1963". Canadian Field-Naturalist. Vol. 78. pp. 52–54. Retrieved May 9, 2014.
  30. ^ Uncle Albert (1964). "Letter to the editor". Canadian Field-Naturalist. Vol. 78. p. 205. Retrieved May 9, 2014.
  31. ^ Shedd, Warner (2000). Owls Aren't Wise and Bats Aren't Blind: A Naturalist Debunks Our Favorite Fallacies About Wildlife. p. 336. ISBN 0-609-60529-1.
  32. ^ Mowat, Farley (2010). Eastern Passage. p. 60. ISBN 978-0-7710-6491-3.
  33. ^ Eastern Passage, pp. 66–67
  34. ^ Querengesser, T. (September 2009). Farley Mowat: Liar or Saint? February 20, 2013, at the Wayback Machine Up Here. Retrieved on: 2012-12-27.
  35. ^ Pryde, Duncan (1975). Nunaga: Ten Years of Eskimo Life. New York: Walker and Co. p. 33.
  36. ^ Farley's Version, Canadian Geographic, September 1998
  37. ^ "Governor General's Literary Awards" [table of winners, 1936–1999]. online guide to writing in canada (track0.com/ogwc). Retrieved 2015-08-20.
  38. ^ (list of winners) July 22, 2015, at the Wayback Machine. Book of the Year for Children Award. Canadian Library Association (cla.ca). Retrieved 2015-07-21. With linked press releases 2003 to present.
  39. ^ a b c d e f g h . Famous Canadians. Argot Language Centre (r-go.ca). Archived from the original on November 17, 2012. Retrieved May 9, 2014.
  40. ^ NOBA 2005 winners
  41. ^ . Canada's Walk of Fame. June 8, 2010. Archived from the original on June 26, 2010. Retrieved June 9, 2010.
  42. ^ "Canadian author Farley Mowat dies at 92". 660 News. May 7, 2014. Retrieved May 9, 2014.
  43. ^ . Archived from the original on January 16, 2017. Retrieved January 14, 2017.
  44. ^ . North American Native Plant Society. Archived from the original on December 31, 2013. Retrieved May 9, 2014.
  45. ^ Hollander, Paul (1995). Anti-Americanism: Irrational and Rational. Oxford University Press, Inc. p. xli. ISBN 9781412817349.
  46. ^ McIntyre, Scott. "The World of Farley Mowat" (PDF). Spring 2012. p. 8. Retrieved May 8, 2014.
  47. ^ Longwell, Karen (May 6, 2014). "Port Hope residents recall funny, kind-hearted Farley Mowat". Northumberland News. Retrieved May 9, 2014.
  48. ^ Todd, Douglas. . Blogs.vancouversun.com. Archived from the original on September 6, 2015. Retrieved 2015-08-24.
  49. ^ "Saints". The Year of The Flood. Retrieved September 7, 2022.
  50. ^ Atwood, Margaret (2009), The year of the flood, Random House Audio/Listening Library, ISBN 978-0-7393-8397-1, OCLC 290470097, retrieved September 7, 2022
  51. ^ Parini, Jay (May 8, 2014). "Farley Mowat obituary". www.theguardian.com. Retrieved May 9, 2014.
  52. ^ Reinhart, Dianne (May 8, 2014). "Farley Mowat, Acclaimed Canadian author, dead at 92". Toronto Star. Retrieved May 23, 2014.
  53. ^ "Farley Mowat's love of nature recalled at private funeral service". CTV News. May 13, 2014. from the original on August 26, 2022.
  54. ^ "HistoricPlaces.ca". HistoricPlaces.ca. Retrieved August 24, 2015.
  55. ^ 1950 Rivière-du-Loup B-50 nuclear weapon loss incident

External links edit

Biography edit

  • James King, Farley: The Life of Farley Mowat. Accessed 29 November 2017.

Webpages edit

  • Official website
  • Douglas & McIntyre catalog November 24, 2015, at the Wayback Machine
  • Penguin-Random House catalog

Film and television edit

  • Mowat in The Canadian Encyclopedia
  • Order of Canada Citation
  • Mowat archives at McMaster University
  • Farley Mowat at IMDb
  • Northern Exposure (Salon.com)
  • Farley Mowat, Prophet - Cover story, Atlantic Insight Magazine - October 1979
  • Farley Mowat at Library of Congress, with 82 library catalogue records

farley, mowat, shepherd, ships, farley, mcgill, mowat, 1921, 2014, canadian, writer, environmentalist, works, were, translated, into, languages, sold, more, than, million, books, achieved, fame, with, publication, books, canadian, north, such, people, deer, 19. For the Sea Shepherd ships see RV Farley Mowat and MY Farley Mowat Farley McGill Mowat OC May 12 1921 May 6 2014 was a Canadian writer and environmentalist His works were translated into 52 languages and he sold more than 17 million books He achieved fame with the publication of his books on the Canadian north such as People of the Deer 1952 and Never Cry Wolf 1963 2 The latter an account of his experiences with wolves in the Arctic was made into a film of the same name released in 1983 For his body of work as a writer he won the annual Vicky Metcalf Award for Children s Literature in 1970 3 Farley MowatOCMowat in 1993BornFarley McGill Mowat 1921 05 12 May 12 1921Belleville Ontario CanadaDiedMay 6 2014 2014 05 06 aged 92 Cobourg Ontario CanadaResting placePort Hope OntarioOccupationAuthor soldier environmentalist naturalist philanthropistLanguageEnglishNationalityCanadianEducationBiologyAlma materUniversity of TorontoPeriod1952 2014GenreMemoir Young adult fiction Non fictionSubjectEnvironmentalism Northern CanadaNotable worksNever Cry Wolf People of the Deer Lost in the Barrens The Curse of the Viking Grave The Grey Seas Under Owls in the FamilySpouseFrances Thornhill Mowat Claire Wheeler Mowat 1 ChildrenRobert Mowat David MowatRelativesJohn Mowat John Bower Mowat John McDonald Mowat Angus McGill Mowat Sir Oliver MowatWebsitefarleymowat wbr caMowat s advocacy for environmental causes earned him praise but his admission after some of his books claims had been debunked that he never let the facts get in the way of the truth 4 earned harsh criticism 2 Descriptions of Mowat refer to his commitment to ideals and poetic descriptions and vivid images as well as his strong antipathies which provoke ridicule lampoons and at times evangelical condemnation 2 Contents 1 Early life and education 2 War service 3 Post war 4 Literary career 5 Criticism 6 Awards and honours 7 Honorary doctorates 8 Affiliations 9 Farley Mowat Library 10 Later life 11 Works 12 References 13 External links 13 1 Biography 13 2 Webpages 13 3 Film and televisionEarly life and education editMowat was born May 12 1921 in Belleville Ontario 5 and grew up in Richmond Hill Ontario 6 His great great uncle was Ontario premier Sir Oliver Mowat 5 and his father Angus Mowat was a librarian who fought in the Battle of Vimy Ridge His mother was Helen Lilian Thomson daughter of Henry Andrew Hoffman Thomson and Georgina Phillips Farley Thomson of Trenton Ontario Mowat started writing in his words mostly verse when his family lived in Windsor from 1930 to 1933 2 In the 1930s the Mowat family moved to Saskatoon Saskatchewan 5 where as a teenager Mowat wrote about birds in a column for the Saskatoon Star Phoenix During this time he also wrote his own nature newsletter Nature Lore 6 In the 1930s Mowat studied zoology at the University of Toronto but never completed a degree 1 He took his first collecting expedition in the summer of 1939 to Saskatoon with fellow zoology student Frank Banfield who collected data regarding mammals while Mowat focused on birds They sold their collections to the Royal Ontario Museum to finance their trip 1 219 Before enlisting Banfield published his field notes in the Canadian Field Naturalist Mowat published his when he returned from World War II War service editDuring World War II Mowat joined the Canadian Army and was commissioned as a second lieutenant into the Second Battalion The Hastings and Prince Edward Regiment affectionately known as the Hasty Ps on 19 July 1940 7 He went overseas as a reinforcement officer for that regiment joining the Canadian Army in the United Kingdom On July 10 1943 he was a subaltern in command of a rifle platoon and participated in Operation Husky the Allied invasion of Sicily 8 Mowat served throughout the campaign as a platoon commander and moved to Italy 6 in September 1943 seeing further combat until December 1943 During the Moro River Campaign part of the Italian Campaign he suffered from battle stress heightened after an incident on Christmas Day outside of Ortona Italy when he was left weeping at the feet of an unconscious friend Lieutenant Allan Al Park who had an enemy bullet in his head 9 He then accepted a job as an intelligence officer at battalion headquarters later moving to brigade headquarters He stayed in Italy with the 1st Canadian Infantry Division for most of the war and was eventually promoted to captain Mowat moved with the division to northwest Europe in early 1945 There he worked as an intelligence officer in the Netherlands and went through enemy lines to start unofficial negotiations about food drops with General Blaskowitz which evolved into face to face talks between senior Canadian commanders and the Nazi occupation regime The food drops under the codename Operation Manna saved thousands of Dutch lives 10 Mowat also formed the 1st Canadian Army Museum Collection Team 11 according to his book My Father s Son and arranged for the transport to Canada of several tons of German military equipment including a V2 rocket and several armoured vehicles Some of these vehicles are on display today at Canadian Forces Base Borden s tank museum 12 as well as the Canadian War Museum in Ottawa 13 14 Mowat was discharged at the end of World War II as a captain and was considered for promotion to major However he declined the offer as it would have required his volunteering to stay in the military until no longer needed which Mowat assumed meant duty with the Canadian Army Occupation Force CAOF but might also have meant the conclusion of the war with Japan 15 He was entitled to the following medals as a result of his service the 1939 1945 Star the Italy Star the France and Germany Star the Defence Medal the Canadian Volunteer Service Medal and the War Medal 1939 1945 Post war editIn 1947 Mowat was hired as field technician for American naturalist Francis Harper s study of the barren ground caribou in the Nueltin Lake area now Nunavut s Kivalliq Region 16 resulting in the publication of Harper s book entitled Caribou of Keewatin 17 Two young Inuit were with them fifteen year old Inuk Luke Anoteelik Luke Anowtalik and his sister Rita who were the sole survivors of starvation in an Inuit village 18 Luke Anowtalik went on to become well known for his distinctive carvings of antler and bone that are now in the permanent collection of the National Gallery of Canada 19 20 Due to a clash of personalities Mowat undertook his own explorations Harper later extracted a promise that neither would mention the other in their respective future writing a promise also extracted from Mowat by later field companions for their lifetimes 1 In the late 1940s Mowat was hired by Frank Banfield then Chief Mammalogist of the newly formed Canadian Wildlife Service as field assistant in Banfield s ambitious multi year investigation of the barren ground caribou 21 22 23 which resulted in Banfield s influential 1951 publication entitled The Barren ground Caribou 24 Mowat who was part of a four researcher team was fired by the chief of Canadian Wildlife Service because of complaints from the local population and lack of formal approval for some activities 1 Literary career editAfter serving in World War II Mowat attended the University of Toronto 25 Mowat s first book People of the Deer 1952 was inspired by a field trip to the Canadian Arctic he made while studying at the University of Toronto Mowat was outraged at the conditions endured by the Inuit living in Northern Canada The book turned Mowat into a controversial popular figure 5 Mowat became a McClelland and Stewart author when they published his book entitled The Regiment in 1955 26 Jack McClelland known for his promotion of Canadian authors became his lifelong friend as well as his publisher Mowat s next book a children s book Lost in the Barrens 1956 won a Governor General s Award 2 27 In 1963 Mowat wrote a possibly fictionalised account of his experiences in the Canadian Arctic with Arctic wolves entitled Never Cry Wolf 1963 which is thought to have been instrumental in changing popular attitudes towards the animals 4 In 1985 Mowat started a book tour of the United States to promote Sea of Slaughter He was denied entry by customs agents at Pearson International Airport in Toronto which was justified by laws that allowed American customs officials to deny entry to entrants they thought were Communist sympathizers Believing gun lobbyists were behind his denial he came forward with his suspicion The law was overturned in 1990 and Mowat wrote about his experience in My Discovery of America 1985 28 Mowat became very interested in Dian Fossey the American ethologist who studied gorillas and was brutally murdered in Rwanda in 1985 His biography of her was published in 1987 in Canada under the title Virunga The Passion of Dian Fossey and in the United States as Woman in the Mists The Story of Dian Fossey and the Mountain Gorillas of Africa an allusion to Fossey s own recounting of her life and research Gorillas in the Mist 1983 Many of Mowat s works are autobiographical such as Owls in the Family 1962 about his childhood The Boat Who Wouldn t Float 1969 one of three books about his time living in Newfoundland and And No Birds Sang 1979 about his experience fighting in Italy in World War II 2 In 1965 Westviking was published followed 30 years later by The Farfarers which suggests a people he called the Albans preceded the Norse to the High Arctic and the Labrador and Newfoundland coasts Criticism editIn a 1964 book review published in Canadian Field Naturalist 29 Frank Banfield of the National Museum of Canada a former Canadian Wildlife Service scientist compared Mowat s 1963 bestseller to Little Red Riding Hood stating I hope that readers of Never Cry Wolf will realize that both stories have about the same factual content 29 Mowat responded to Banfield s criticisms in a letter to the editor of the Canadian Field Naturalist and signed it Mowat s wolf Uncle Albert 30 L David Mech a wolf expert is cited by Warner Shedd a former regional executive of the National Wildlife Federation as noting that no scientist Mowat notwithstanding has ever encountered a wolf population that primarily subsists on small prey as claimed in Mowat s book Mech additionally states Mowat is not a scientist and his book although presented as truth is fiction 31 The New York Times Book Review published a dismissive review of People of the Deer on February 24 1952 32 The Beaver was quite hostile in its first review The second review by A E Porsild was equally hostile questioning the existence of the Ihalmiut 33 Despite a few harsh reviews however People of the Deer was generally well received published in the Atlantic Monthly and showered with glowing international reviews 34 Duncan Pryde a Hudson s Bay Company trader who pioneered the linguistic study of Inuit languages attacked Mowat s claim to have picked up the language quickly enough in two months to discuss detailed concepts such as shamanism pointing out that the language is complex and required a year or more for Europeans to master the basics Pryde said that when Mowat visited his post at Baker Lake in 1958 10 years after Mowat s earlier trip he could barely speak a single word in the Inuit language 35 Canadian Geographic published excerpts from The Farfarers with the comment that it was a highly speculative blend of history and archeology In it Mowat again draws upon Norse sagas the chronicles of Irish monks and accounts of Roman travellers as well as the works of modern historians and archeologists It is both detailed and as with all early history sketchy The written record for much of the period covered is scant and the archeological record spotty Still such speculative writing can suggest avenues of exploration and study for future researchers No professional archeologists are known to share Mowat s theories but that does not disturb him A literary gadfly for much of his long career Mowat is happy to stir up debate and challenge academics to match the visions that he champions and defends with such vigour and relish 36 Awards and honours edit1950s Mowat won two Canadian year s best book awards for Lost in the Barrens Little Brown 1956 an adventure novel set in Northern Manitoba and southwestern North West Territories namely the Governor General s Award for Juvenile Fiction for 1956 37 and the 1958 Canadian Library Association Book of the Year for Children Award 38 In 1952 Mowat won the University of Western Ontario s President s Medal for best short story for Eskimo Spring In 1953 People of the Deer was awarded the Anisfield Wolf Book Award by the Anisfield Wolf Foundation In 1956 Mowat won the Governor General s Award And in 1957 the Book of the Year Award Canadian Association of Children s Librarians for Lost in the Barrens 39 Also in 1958 Mowat won the Canadian Women s Clubs Award for children s book The Dog Who Wouldn t Be and the Hans Christian Andersen International Award 1960s In 1962 he won the Boys Clubs of America Junior Book Award for Owls in the Family In 1963 he won the National Association of Independent Schools Award In 1965 he made the Hans Christian Andersen Honours List for juvenile books 39 1970s In 1970 The Boat Who Wouldn t Float won the Stephen Leacock Memorial Medal for Humour and in 1972 it made the L Etoile de la Mer Honours List 39 Mowat also won the Vicky Metcalf Award 1970 39 Mark Twain Award 1971 39 and the Curran Award 1977 for contributions to understanding wolves 39 1980s He was given the Knight of Mark Twain distinction in 1980 39 In 1985 he received the Author s Award Foundation for the Advancement of Canadian Letters for Sea of Slaughter In 1988 Virunga was designated Book of the Year Foundation for the Advancement of Canadian Letters and Mowat was named Author of the Year by the Canadian Booksellers Association In 1989 he won the Gemini Award for best documentary script for The New North 1990s In 1991 the Council of Canadians presented him with the Back the Nation Award 39 2000s In 2002 the Sea Shepherd Conservation Society ship RV Farley Mowat formerly M Y Sea Shepherd III M Y Ocean Warrior was named in his honour Mowat frequently visited it to assist its mission and provided financial support to the group In 2005 Mowat received the first and only Lifetime Achievement Award from the National Outdoor Book Award 40 On June 8 2010 it was announced that Mowat would receive a star on Canada s Walk of Fame 27 41 2010s In 2014 only weeks after his death a life sized sculpture of Farley Mowat commissioned by Toronto businessman Ron Rhodes and executed by the Canadian artist George Bartholomew Boileau was unveiled at the University of Saskatchewan located in Saskatoon where Farley spent many of his formative years His wife Claire was in attendance Mowat had seen the finished clay in the artist s studio several months previously Mowat was made an Officer of the Order of Canada in 1981 He had previously been awarded both the Canadian Centennial Medal 1967 and the Queen Elizabeth II Silver Jubilee Medal 1977 27 42 As an Order of Canada recipient he automatically qualified for the 125th Anniversary of the Confederation of Canada Medal 1992 the Queen Elizabeth II Golden Jubilee Medal 2002 and the Queen Elizabeth II Diamond Jubilee Medal 2012 ribbon bar as it would look at the date of his death including war service medals nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Farley is also the namesake of the lovable sheepdog in the comic strip by Lynn Johnston For Better or For Worse Johnston and Mowat were long time friends 43 Honorary doctorates edit1970 D Litt Doctor of Letters Laurentian University 1973 LL D Doctor of Laws University of Lethbridge 1973 LL D Doctor of Laws University of Toronto 1979 LL D Doctor of Laws University of PEI 1982 D Litt Doctor of Letters University of Victoria 1985 D Litt Doctor of Letters Lakehead University 1994 D Litt Doctor of Letters McMaster University 1995 LL D Doctor of Laws Queen s University 1996 D Litt Doctor of Letters Cape Breton UniversityAffiliations editMowat was a strong supporter of the Green Party of Canada and a close friend of the party s leader Elizabeth May The Green Party sent a direct mail fundraising appeal in Mowat s name in June 2007 and that same year Mowat became a patron of the Nova Scotia Nature Trust by donating over 200 acres 0 81 km2 of his land in Cape Breton Island to the Nature Trust He was also an honorary director of the North American Native Plant Society 44 Mowat was described as a life long socialist 45 Farley Mowat Library editIn 2012 independent Canadian publisher Douglas amp McIntyre announced they had created the Farley Mowat Library series and would be re releasing many of his most popular titles with new designs and introductions in print and e book format 46 Mowat s archives are held at the William Ready Division of Archives and Research Collections at McMaster University in Hamilton Ontario Later life edit nbsp Mowat in 2010Mowat and his second wife Claire spent their later years together in Port Hope Ontario and their summers on a farm on Cape Breton Island 47 They attended a local Anglican church in Port Hope about monthly Claire emphasizing that Mowat was more spiritual than religious and Mowat stating that he probably believed in God the same way his dog did and that such ceremonies were important in tying people to each other and the world 48 Mowat is considered a saint by the God s Gardeners a fictional religious sect that is the focus of Margaret Atwood s 2009 novel The Year of the Flood 49 50 nbsp Mowat s grave siteMowat died on May 6 2014 less than one week before his 93rd birthday 6 51 He maintained his interest in Canada s wilderness areas throughout his life and could be heard a few days before his death on the CBC Radio One program The Current speaking against the provision of Wi Fi service in national parks 52 He is buried at the historic St Mark s Anglican Church cemetery in Port Hope 53 54 Works editPeople of the Deer 1952 revised 1975 ISBN 0 89190 818 8 The Regiment book 1955 ISBN 0 7710 6575 2 Lost in the Barrens 1956 ISBN 0 553 27525 9 Lost in the Barrens film 1990 https www imdb com title tt0100058 The Dog Who Wouldn t Be 1957 ISBN 0 553 27928 9 Coppermine Journey 1958 ISBN 0 771 06690 2 The Grey Seas Under 1959 ISBN 1 58574 240 6 The Desperate People 1959 revised 1999 ISBN 1 471 32945 3 Ordeal by Ice 1960 ISBN 0 7710 6686 4 Owls in the Family 1961 ISBN 0 440 41361 3 The Serpent s Coil 1961 ISBN 0 738 71577 8 The Black Joke 1962 LCCN 63 13462 Never Cry Wolf 1963 LCCN 63 19169 Never Cry Wolf film in 1983 ISBN 1 55890 281 3 Westviking 1965 LCCN 65 20746 The Curse of the Viking Grave 1966 ISBN 0 553 27525 9 The Curse of the Viking Grave film 1992 https www imdb com title tt0102338 Canada North illustrated edition 1967 ISBN 978 0316586474 The Polar Passion 1967 ISBN 978 0879053482 This Rock Within the Sea with John de Visser 1968 LCCN 69 12137 The Boat Who Wouldn t Float 1969 ISBN 0 553 27788 X Sibir book 1970 ISBN 978 0771065767 A Whale for the Killing 1972 revised 2012 ISBN 978 1 77100 028 4 Tundra book 1973 ISBN 0 7710 6627 9 Wake of the Great Sealers with David Blackwood 1973 LCCN 73 14315 The Snow Walker book 1976 revised 2014 ISBN 978 1771000857 The Snow Walker movie 2003 ISBN 1 59241 410 9 Canada North Now 1976 ISBN 0 7710 6596 5 And No Birds Sang Farley Mowat 1979 revised 2012 ISBN 978 1 77100 030 7 The World of Farley Mowat 1980 ISBN 0 316 58689 7 Sea of Slaughter 1984 ISBN 0 87113 013 0 My Discovery of America 1985 ISBN 0 87113 050 5 Virunga The Passion of Dian Fossey 1987 ISBN 0 7710 6677 5 The New Founde Land 1989 ISBN 0 7710 6689 9 Rescue the Earth 1990 ISBN 0 7710 6684 8 My Father s Son book 1992 ISBN 1 55013 430 2 Born Naked 1993 ISBN 0 395 73528 9 Aftermath 1995 ISBN 1 57098 103 5 The Farfarers 1998 reprint 2000 ISBN 1 883642 56 6 Walking on the Land 2000 ISBN 1 58642 024 0 High Latitudes 2002 ISBN 1 58642 061 5 No Man s River 2004 ISBN 0 7867 1430 1 Bay of Spirits 2006 ISBN 0 7710 6538 8 Otherwise 2008 ISBN 0 7710 6489 6 Eastern Passage 2010 ISBN 978 0 7710 6491 3 55 The Top of the World Trilogy Ordeal by Ice 1960 revised 1973 ISBN 0 7710 6686 4 The Polar Passion 1967 revised 1973 ISBN 978 0879053482 Tundra 1973 ISBN 0 7710 6627 9References edit a b c d e Cook Francis R Obituary Farley Mowat 1921 2014 Canadian Field Naturalist 128 retrieved November 1 2014 a b c d e f Gerald J Rubio Farley Mowat The Canadian Encyclopedia Retrieved September 4 2019 Vicky Metcalf Award for Literature for Young People Awards Writers Trust of Canada writerstrust com Retrieved 2015 08 20 With linked guidelines and list of winners a b Burgess Steve May 11 1999 Northern exposure Salon com Archived from the original on January 11 2006 Retrieved March 24 2006 a b c d Sandra Martin May 7 2014 Acclaimed Canadian author Farley Mowat dead at 92 The Globe and Mail Retrieved September 4 2019 a b c d Rinehart Dianne May 7 2014 Farley Mowat acclaimed Canadian author dead at 92 Toronto Star Retrieved May 7 2014 The Canada Gazette The Canada Gazette Vol 74 no 21 November 23 1940 p 1772 And No Birds Sang p 7 And No Birds Sang p 259 CBC Radio Canada International Harold A Skaarup Canadian War Trophies Archived from the original on November 4 2015 Retrieved November 11 2015 My Fathers Son CL Publishers Weekly January 4 1993 Retrieved May 9 2014 Ottawa Citizen Andrew King November 7 2014 Legion Magazine September 2014 My Father s Son p 359 Harper 1955 Harper Francis October 21 1955 Hall E Raymond ed Caribou of Keewatin Kansas Museum of Natural Science via Gutenberg Press p 164 Kuehl Gerald 2002 Luke Anowtalik Portraits of the North retrieved November 2 2014 Luke Anowtalik Inuit Arviat Nunavut Territory Canada 1932 2006 Vancouver BC retrieved November 2 2014 Hessel Ingo Winter 1990 Arviat Stone Sculpture Born of the Struggle with an Uncompromising Medium Inuit Art Quarterly 4 15 Burnett J Alexander November 1 2002 Working with Mammals 1962 67 Building a National Wildlife Program A Passion for Wildlife The History of the Canadian Wildlife Service Vancouver British Columbia UBC Press pp 96 128 ISBN 9780774842525 Burnett J Alexander January March 1999 A Passion for Wildlife A History of the Canadian Wildlife Service 1947 1997 The Canadian Field Naturalist Sackville New Brunswick Canada 113 1 183 Sandlos John November 1 2011 Hunters at the Margin Native People and Wildlife Conservation in the Northwest Territories Vancouver University of British Columbia Press p 360 Banfield Frank 1951a The barren ground caribou Ottawa Ontario Canada Department of Resources and Development pp 56 vi Kennedy John R May 7 2014 Canadian author Farley Mowat dies at 92 Global News Retrieved May 8 2014 Thomson Donna The Boat Who Wouldn t Float The Happy Adventure of Farley Mowat and Jack McClelland McMaster University a b c Remembering Farley Mowat CBC Books May 7 2014 Retrieved May 9 2014 Martin Sandra May 7 2014 Scarred by war acclaimed author Farley Mowat spent his life trying to save animals nature and First Nations The Globe and Mail Retrieved May 8 2014 a b Banfield A W F 1964 Book Review Never Cry Wolf by Farley Mowat 1963 Canadian Field Naturalist Vol 78 pp 52 54 Retrieved May 9 2014 Uncle Albert 1964 Letter to the editor Canadian Field Naturalist Vol 78 p 205 Retrieved May 9 2014 Shedd Warner 2000 Owls Aren t Wise and Bats Aren t Blind A Naturalist Debunks Our Favorite Fallacies About Wildlife p 336 ISBN 0 609 60529 1 Mowat Farley 2010 Eastern Passage p 60 ISBN 978 0 7710 6491 3 Eastern Passage pp 66 67 Querengesser T September 2009 Farley Mowat Liar or Saint Archived February 20 2013 at the Wayback Machine Up Here Retrieved on 2012 12 27 Pryde Duncan 1975 Nunaga Ten Years of Eskimo Life New York Walker and Co p 33 Farley s Version Canadian Geographic September 1998 Governor General s Literary Awards table of winners 1936 1999 online guide to writing in canada track0 com ogwc Retrieved 2015 08 20 list of winners Archived July 22 2015 at the Wayback Machine Book of the Year for Children Award Canadian Library Association cla ca Retrieved 2015 07 21 With linked press releases 2003 to present a b c d e f g h Farley Mowat nature lover Famous Canadians Argot Language Centre r go ca Archived from the original on November 17 2012 Retrieved May 9 2014 NOBA 2005 winners 2010 Inductees for The Canada Honours Announced Canada s Walk of Fame June 8 2010 Archived from the original on June 26 2010 Retrieved June 9 2010 Canadian author Farley Mowat dies at 92 660 News May 7 2014 Retrieved May 9 2014 How Farley Got His Name Archived from the original on January 16 2017 Retrieved January 14 2017 The 2013 2014 NANPS Board of Directors North American Native Plant Society Archived from the original on December 31 2013 Retrieved May 9 2014 Hollander Paul 1995 Anti Americanism Irrational and Rational Oxford University Press Inc p xli ISBN 9781412817349 McIntyre Scott The World of Farley Mowat PDF Spring 2012 p 8 Retrieved May 8 2014 Longwell Karen May 6 2014 Port Hope residents recall funny kind hearted Farley Mowat Northumberland News Retrieved May 9 2014 Todd Douglas Farley Mowat I believe in God the way my dog does Vancouver Sun Blogs vancouversun com Archived from the original on September 6 2015 Retrieved 2015 08 24 Saints The Year of The Flood Retrieved September 7 2022 Atwood Margaret 2009 The year of the flood Random House Audio Listening Library ISBN 978 0 7393 8397 1 OCLC 290470097 retrieved September 7 2022 Parini Jay May 8 2014 Farley Mowat obituary www theguardian com Retrieved May 9 2014 Reinhart Dianne May 8 2014 Farley Mowat Acclaimed Canadian author dead at 92 Toronto Star Retrieved May 23 2014 Farley Mowat s love of nature recalled at private funeral service CTV News May 13 2014 Archived from the original on August 26 2022 HistoricPlaces ca HistoricPlaces ca Retrieved August 24 2015 1950 Riviere du Loup B 50 nuclear weapon loss incidentExternal links editBiography edit James King Farley The Life of Farley Mowat Accessed 29 November 2017 Webpages edit Official website Douglas amp McIntyre catalog Archived November 24 2015 at the Wayback Machine Penguin Random House catalogFilm and television edit In Search of Farley Mowat 1981 a National Film Board of Canada NFB film Ten Million Books An Introduction to Farley Mowat 1981 an NFB film Never Cry Wolf film 1983 starring Charles Martin Smith https www imdb com title tt0086005 Lost in the Barrens miniseries 1990 starring Adam Beach The Curse of the Viking Grave miniseries 1992 The Snow Walker 2003 starring Barry Pepper https www imdb com title tt0337721 Finding Farley 2009 an NFB film https www nfb ca film finding farley https www imdb com title tt1519307 nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Farley Mowat Mowat in The Canadian Encyclopedia Order of Canada Citation Mowat archives at McMaster University Farley Mowat at IMDb Northern Exposure Salon com Another page with Mowat s photo Farley Mowat Prophet Cover story Atlantic Insight Magazine October 1979 Farley Mowat at Library of Congress with 82 library catalogue records Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Farley Mowat amp oldid 1191741607, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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