Mitchell spent his childhood in Weyburn, Saskatchewan, but had to move to Florida when he was 12 to aid his recovery from tuberculosis. Returning to Canada in 1931, he studied at the University of Manitoba and the University of Alberta. In 1944, after teaching for 2 years, he settled in High River, Alta, where he remained until 1968 except for 3 years as fiction editor at MACLEAN'S (1948-51). After 1968 he was writer-in-residence at the Banff Centre, the University of Calgary, the University of Alberta and Massey College, Toronto. He was at the University Windsor (1978-87) and lived in Calgary until his death.
In 1947 Mitchell achieved instant recognition with the publication of his classic WHO HAS SEEN THE WIND. The novel examines the initiation of the boy Brian into the meaning of birth and death, life, freedom and justice. The children and the eccentrics, the ever-drunken Ben and the madman Saint Sammy, are the most vivid characters. Mitchell portrays the beauty and power of the prairie and the wind, symbolizing God.
The Vanishing Point (1973) was a reworking of an early unpublished novel. Set on the Paradise Valley Reserve, its theme is the resolution of alienation; it is an affirmation of racial and personal interconnectedness. His novel How I Spent My Summer Holidays (1981) returns to the theme of initiation, but the vision is much darker. Hugh leaves childhood innocence to pass into a world of betrayal, guilt, repression and violence. In the end, the old man Hugh is left only with knowledge. Since Daisy Creek (1984) is a contemporary Canadian Moby Dick. Mauled by a magnificent grizzly, Colin Dobbs, a failed novelist, suffers mental as well as physical scars, and seeks to heal himself through writing. The salty Dobbs and his feisty daughter Annie are Mitchell's most vivid characters since Daddy Sherry.
Mitchell also wrote many plays for radio and TV. The popular Jake and the Kid (1961) originated in stories written for Maclean's. The series ran weekly on CBC Radio 1950-56 and made Mitchell a national celebrity. The eccentric characters, tall tales and local dialect of Crocus, Sask, added to the audience's enjoyment. The series was televised in 1961. The early radio plays The Devil's Instrument (1949) and The Black Bonspiel of Wullie MacCrimmon (written 1951, published 1965) were later revised as full-length plays; the latter was staged in 1979 by Theatre Calgary as were The Kite (1981) and 2 plays written for the stage, Back to Beulah (which won the Chalmers Award, 1976) and For Those in Peril on the Sea (1982). These plays were published in Dramatic W.O. Mitchell (1982). He also wrote a musical, Wild Rose, in 1967. The audio book An Evening with W.O. Mitchell (1997) features the author reading from his own work in his inimitably dramatic style.
In 1973 Mitchell became a Member of the Order of Canada. He was awarded several honorary degrees and was the director of the Writing Division, Banff Centre 1975-85. He received the Stephen Leacock Award for his book According to Jake and the Kid (1989) and published a mystery, For Art's Sake, in 1992, followed by an illustrated edition of The Black Bonspiel of Willie MacCrimmon in 1993. In 1992 he became an honorary Member of the Privy Council. After his death in 1998 the W.O. Mitchell Literary Prize was established for an individual who has produced a substantial body of work and who has acted as a mentor to new writers.
Author CATHERINE MCLAY
Suggested Reading
Ormond and Barbara Mitchell, W.O.: The Life of W.O. Mitchell 1914-47 (1999) and Mitchell: The Life of W.O. Mitchell 1948-98 (2005); Courtney Milne, W.O. Mitchell Country (1999).
Links to Other Sites
W.O. Mitchell
A brief audio clip featuring a talk by W.O. Mitchell from CBC Radio's "This Country in the Morning." From the CBC Digital Archives.
W.O. Mitchell: The Prairie Son
This Canada Post stamp was dedicated to W.O. Mitchell. Part of the Millennium Collection series. Click on the stamp to enlarge the image. From Library and Archives Canada.
Theatre Calgary
Check out the Theatre Calgary website for this season's performance dates and times, special events, school programs, a profile of the current artistic director, and more. Also lists the many outstanding plays staged by previous artistic directors.
The Silverman Concert
This article focuses on technical issues involved in recording live classical music performances. Includes an analysis of microphone characteristics and more. From "Stereophile" magazine.
Examined lives: the biography boom
In this 1997 article, Robert Fulford offers his thoughts about the growing interest in biographies of Canadian authors, actors, and academics.
Canadian Authors
About a series of documentary films featuring three of Canada's most acclaimed authors: Margaret Atwood, Farley Mowat, and W.O. Mitchell. From the National Film Board of Canada website.


Shawnadithit grew anxious waiting for her uncle, Longnon, to return to camp at the junction of Badger Brook and the Exploits River, deep in the wilds of Newfoundland...
INSIDE TCE
