Author Brian Doyle strove to understand what it means to be a child | Page 878 | Unpublished
Hello!
Source Feed: The Globe and Mail
Author: Jeffrey Canton
Publication Date: January 13, 2026 - 15:41

Stay informed

Author Brian Doyle strove to understand what it means to be a child

January 13, 2026

From the publication of his first novel, Hey,Dad!, in 1978, Brian Doyle delighted readers with his unique style and distinctive voice. Blending comedy and tragedy with a dash of Dylan Thomas, a sprinkle of Shakespeare and a touch of blarney, Mr. Doyle’s novels explored issues relevant to the lives of the young readers for whom he was writing. And behind each of the rollicking belly laughs was a humane and sensitively expressed desire to understand what it means to be a child.

Mr. Doyle continued producing works for young readers, examining what he calls “the classic concerns, the ones with the capital letters.” As dauntingly serious as this statement sounds, Mr. Doyle’s novels are actually comic, reflecting his vision of life: “Laughter and tears are very close together,” he once observed. “I can’t do one without the other. When I work on a serious question, a mirror of humour always presents itself.”



Unpublished Newswire

 
Starting Feb 16., Canadians will be able to qualify for some consumer rebates on the purchase or lease of a new electric or plug-in hybrid electric vehicle.
February 10, 2026 - 11:43 | Ariel Rabinovitch | Global News - Canada
Pierre Poilievre gambled with his political future—and won—at the Conservative Party of Canada convention in Calgary two weeks ago. Delegates, who gathered under unseasonably warm January skies courtesy of a timely Chinook, were asked whether to grant their leader a vote of confidence. Late that Friday night, the verdict was delivered: 87.4 percent of those who cast a ballot voted to keep Poilievre at the helm for another round. Was there ever any real doubt? At first glance, recent polling suggests not. Despite currently trailing the Liberals in both vote intention and seat projections...
February 10, 2026 - 11:39 | Philippe J. Fournier | Walrus
OTTAWA — Justice Minister Sean Fraser said on Tuesday that the Liberal government is willing to amend its bill targeting hate to address concerns stemming from a change to remove religious defences from the country’s hate speech laws.  Fraser made the comments as the governing party searches for ways to see the bill, known by its legislative title of C-9, passed as part of Prime Minister Mark Carney’s justice agenda. After a meeting of...
February 10, 2026 - 11:35 | Stephanie Taylor | National Post