Jack Hodgins

For the fictional character from Bones (TV series) see Jack Hodgins (Bones)

Jack Hodgins (born October 3, 1938 in Comox Valley, British Columbia) is a Canadian novelist and short story writer.

Hodgins attended the University of British Columbia, where he was encouraged by Earle Birney. He worked as a high school teacher of English in Nanaimo, British Columbia, before taking a position at the University of Victoria in the Creative Writing Department.

Critically acclaimed, among his best received works is Broken Ground (1998), a historical novel set after the First World War, for which he received the Ethel Wilson Fiction Prize.

Bibliography

Novels

Short stories

Children's literature

Non-fiction

Biography

Jack Hodgins grew up in Merville, a small town in the Comox Valley of British Columbia. He left home for Vancouver, where he graduated with a Bachelor's Degree in Education. Hodgins spent the next 18 years of his career teaching English in Nanaimo, back on Vancouver Island.

In 1968, his first piece of literary work was accepted by a publication, and the exposure allowed him the chance to expand his work in print. With the publication of his first book of short stories, “Spit Delaney’s Island” (1976), and his first novel “The Invention of the World” (1977), Jack Hodgins was well on his way to becoming a recognized name in Canadian literature.

He began receiving short-term teaching positions at universities throughout Canada, including Simon Fraser University and the University of Ottawa. (http://www.nwpassages.com/bios/hodgins.asp). His passion to educate led him around the world- he lectured in countries such as Japan, Finland, Norway, Germany, Spain, and Australia. In 1983, he accepted a position as a professor of Creative Writing at the University of Victoria. He and his family settled themselves in Victoria and stayed through until the time of his retirement from teaching, in 2002.

Hodgins continues his life in Victoria today and occasionally gives lectures on writing and speaks at a workshop in Mallorca, Spain annually. Hodgins has received much recognition for his work including the Eaton's BC Book Award for “Spit Delaney’s Island,” the Lieutenant Governor's Award for Literary Excellence in 2006, and the Terasen Lifetime Achievement Award. In 2001, a play based on several short stories from his book “The Barclay Family Theatre” was made into an opera by composer Christopher Donnison and premiered on stage in Victoria, BC. His life has been commemorated in a National Film Board Film entitled Jack Hodgins' Island.

Literature and the Environment

In an email interview with students from the University of Victoria, Hodgins elaborates on place affecting his writing, and uses “Macken Charm” as his example.

“In The Macken Charm the family gathers (after a family funeral) at the site of a burnt hotel owned by the family. This place exists still. My own memories go back to playing as a child in that hotel when it was no longer in use. I knew that my parents began their married life in that hotel—the old uncle who owned it asked them to move in and look after it and them. My mother learned to cook on a stove big enough for a hotel dining room full of guests! All of this is in the novel, pretty well just as it happens, though the characters are fictitious replacements for the originals. The beach, the trees, the roads, the cars of 1956, the store, the funeral parlour, the bridge over the river in Courtenay, the glacier—they're all there. The story is fiction but the place is real.”

Awards and honours

Periodicals

Short stories and articles have been published in several magazines in Canada, France, Australia, and the US, including:

Anthologies

Teaching Short Fiction, edited with Bruce Nesbitt: (ComCept Publishing)

Voice and Vision, edited with W.H. New: (McClelland and Stewart)

The Frontier Experience: (Macmillan of Canada, 1975)

The West Coast Experience: (Macmillan of Canada, 1976)

BEGINNINGS: samplings from a long apprenticeship: novels which were imagined, written, re-written, rejected, abandoned, and supplanted: (Grand Union Press, 1983)

References