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Farley Mowat



         


Farley Mowat (born May 12, 1921) is a Canadian novelist and non-fiction author.

He grew up in Saskatoon and, having an immense love for animals, kept birds and an alligator inside his house. He wrote many works of non-fiction on subjects such as nature, archaeology and Inuit life.

During the Second World War, Mowat served as an officer with the Hastings and Prince Edwards Regiment of the Canadian Army. He was amongst the first to land in Operation Husky, the Allied invasion of Sicily, and served with the Canadian forces amongst the D-Day Dodgers for the rest of their contribution to the Italion campaign.

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Impact

More than any other identifiable individual, Mowat has been responsible for the remarkable sea-change in popular attitudes towards the wolf species. Using a blend of fiction and observation he wrote an accessible portrait of the social relations in a wolf pack in his Never Cry Wolf, which did irreparable damage to the image of the wolf as a projection of human fears of our own darkest proclivities. While sometimes whimsical and even Disney-esque, the portrait was a real start in bringing an ethological (viewing non-humans in their own terms) view of wolves to the public.

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Criticism

Many of the articles written about him are not positive. The Toronto Star has written that he bases his stories on fiction and avoids the truth. Once, when Mowat said that he has spent two summers and a winter studying wolves, the Toronto Star wrote that Mowat had only spent 90 hours studying the wolves.

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Writings by Farley Mowat






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