Sneha Girap (Editor)

Keath Fraser

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Occupation
  
Author, editor

Name
  
Keath Fraser

Genre
  
Fiction,


Period
  
1982 - present

Nationality
  
Canadian

Role
  
Author

Born
  
25 December 1944 Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada (
1944-12-25
)

Notable awards
  
(1995) Chapters/Books in Canada First Novel Award for Popular Anatomy (1986) Ethel Wilson Fiction Prize

Education
  
University of British Columbia, University of London

Nominations
  
Governor General's Award for English-language fiction

Books
  
As for me and my body, The voice gallery, Popular anatomy, 13 ways of listening to a stranger, Telling my love lies

Keath Fraser (born 25 December 1944 in Vancouver, British Columbia) is a Canadian fiction author. He lived in London from 1970 to 1973, where he studied at the University of London and earned his Ph.D. He later taught English in Calgary, Alberta, Canada for five years as a tenured professor. He then stopped teaching to become a full-time author.

Contents

Fraser has travelled widely in Asia, Europe, Australia, India and Cambodia, and these experiences have contributed to his work. Fraser edited the books Bad Trips (1991) and Worst Journeys: The Picador Book of Travel (1992), both humorous anthologies authored by various writers concerning their experiences in foreign lands.

Writing style

Bronwyn Drainie writes, "If you really want to journey into the heart of darkness, you'd be advised to travel with Vancouver writer Keath Fraser, a man of extraordinary talents."

Fraser's dark, vivid and incredibly distinctive writing style ranges very widely in genre, settings and voices and is clearly characterized by his love of the city of Vancouver, his birthplace and home since his return from London in 1973. In 1997 what turned out to be a controversial biography by him of the novelist Sinclair Ross was published, As For Me and My Body: A Memoir of Sinclair Ross. In it Fraser made public knowledge of Ross's thus-far little-known homosexuality.

Vocal impairment

Fraser suffers from spasmodic dysphonia, a voice disorder caused by involuntary movements of one or more muscles of the voice box that causes the voice to sound stiff and strangled. He has written a memoir of his battles to regain control of his voice called The Voice Gallery.

Awards and Recognitions

  • 1985: fiction finalist, Governor General's Awards for Foreign Affairs
  • 1986: winner, Ethel Wilson Fiction Prize for Foreign Affairs
  • 1995: winner, Books in Canada First Novel Award for Popular Anatomy
  • 2003: finalist, Hubert Evans Non-Fiction Prize
  • References

    Keath Fraser Wikipedia