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Oonah McFee

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Nationality
  
Canadian

Role
  
Novelist

Period
  
1970s

Died
  
December 19, 2006


Notable works
  
Sandbars

Spouse
  
Allan McFee

Name
  
Oonah McFee

Books
  
Sandbars

Occupation
  
novelist, short stories

Oonah McFee, née Browne (September 11, 1916 – December 19, 2006) was a Canadian novelist and short story writer, who won the Books in Canada First Novel Award for her 1977 novel Sandbars.

Born in Newcastle, New Brunswick and raised in the Ottawa Valley area, she worked for CBC Radio's Ottawa station CBO in the 1930s, and married her colleague Allan McFee in 1941. They later moved to Toronto, where Allan was an announcer for the CBC's national network, while Oonah began to study creative writing in the 1960s, publishing her first short story in Texas Quarterly in 1971.

Following her award win for Sandbars, she was writer in residence at Trent University in 1979, and continued to publish short stories and journalism. Sandbars was originally planned as the first volume in a linked quartet of novels, of which the first sequel was to be titled Silent Eyes, but the later books were never published.

References

Oonah McFee Wikipedia