Chris Scott (writer)
{{Short description|English-Canadian writer}}
{{Infobox writer
| name = Chris Scott
| image =
| birth_name =
| birth_date = 1945
| birth_place = Kingston upon Hull, Yorkshire, England
| occupation = novelist, short story writer
| nationality = English-Canadian
| period = 1970s-2010s
| notableworks = "Bartleby", Antichthon, Jack
| spouse =
| website =
}}
Chris Scott (born 1945 in Kingston upon Hull, Yorkshire, England)"Ripper from Ottawa Valley?" Ottawa Citizen, January 7, 1989. is an English-Canadian writer. His novel Antichthon was a nominee for the Governor General's Award for English-language fiction at the 1982 Governor General's Awards,"Finalists declared in literary awards". The Globe and Mail, May 25, 1983. and his novel Jack won the Arthur Ellis Award for Best Crime Novel in 1989. His novel, Bartleby was republished in Glasgow in 2016."Farmer in spring, award-winning writer in winter". Ottawa Citizen, June 15, 1989.
Educated at the University of Hull, Manchester University, Scott has taught at York University in Toronto and Lake Superior State University in Sault Ste. Marie, Michigan.[http://www.collectionscanada.gc.ca/literaryarchives/027011-200.121-e.html Chris Scott fonds. - 1969-1984]. Library and Archives Canada. He became a Canadian citizen in 1975, and resided on a farm in Lanark County, Ontario during much of his writing career.
He is noted for his mixture of genre literature with experimental fiction; Antichthon, for example, applied the format and tropes of a contemporary spy novel to a historical retelling of the 1593 heresy trial of Giordano Bruno,W. H. New, A History of Canadian Literature. McGill-Queen's University Press, 2003. {{ISBN|9780773571365}}. p. 273. and Jack took as its premise that Thomas Neill Cream, a Scottish-Canadian doctor and murderer, was the real Jack the Ripper.
He has also been a contributor to CBC Radio and a book reviewer for Books in Canada, The Globe and Mail, the Montreal Gazette, the Ottawa Citizen and the Toronto Star.
Works
- Bartleby (1971, 2016)
- To Catch a Spy (1978)
- Antichthon (1982)
- Hitler's Bomb (1984)
- The Heretic (1985) (Antichthon published under another title. As Scott explains via email, "Quartet Books published it in London in 1985, under the title The Heretic. (The house, financed by Gulf oil money, didn't like the Greek title Antichthon.)")
- Jack (1988)
References
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Category:Canadian male novelists
Category:20th-century Canadian novelists
Category:21st-century Canadian novelists
Category:Canadian crime fiction writers
Category:Canadian historical novelists
Category:Canadian literary critics
Category:English emigrants to Canada
Category:People from Lanark County
Category:Writers from Kingston upon Hull
Category:Naturalized citizens of Canada
Category:Alumni of the University of Hull
Category:Alumni of the University of Manchester
Category:University of Pennsylvania alumni
Category:Academic staff of York University
Category:20th-century Canadian male writers
Category:Canadian male non-fiction writers
Category:Novelists from Ontario
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