Robertson Davies (August 28, 1913 - December 2, 1995) was a Canadian author.
Growing up, Davies was surrounded by language. His father was a newspaper man, and both his parents were voracious readers. He, in turn, read everything he could. While Davies spent his first twenty-three working years at various newspapers in small town Ontario, his first passion was for the theatre, which is where he met and married his wife, Brenda. He was a playwright and director for many years, in England and Canada.
Davies later became the Master of Massey College at the University of Toronto (1961-1981).
His greatest novel is probably Fifth Business (1970), a curious book which draws heavily on Davies's love of myth and knowledge of small-town mores. The narrator, like Davies, is of immigrant Canadian background, with a father who runs the town paper. In a book full of singular characters, the central character is a simple, mentally defective woman named Mary Dempster, who may or may not be a saint.
Plays, novels, and other published writing:
- The Salterton Trilogy:
- Tempest-Tost
- Leaven of Malice
- A Mixture of Frailties
- The Deptford Trilogy:
- Fifth Business
- The Manticore
- World of Wonders
- The Cornish Trilogy:
- The Rebel Angels
- What's Bred in the Bone
- The Lyre of Orpheus
- The papers of Samuel Marchbanks
- The Cunning Man
- Murther and Walking Spirits
- Collections:
- High Spirits
- Essays:
- One Half of Robertson Davies
- A Voice From the Attic