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Kildare Dobbs: an accomplished and resourceful writer

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  • Kildare Dobbs: an accomplished and resourceful writer

    Kildare Dobbs: an accomplished and resourceful writerBorn: October 10th,
    1923. Died: April 1st, 2013.


    Kildare Dobbs: committed much of his abundant life to the written word and
    was the most genial of companions.


    Sat, May 11, 2013, 06:00
    http://www.irishtimes.com/life-and-style/people/kildare-dobbs-an-accomplished-and-resourceful-writer-1.1388911#

    First published:Sat, May 11, 2013, 06:00


    Seamus Heaney
    once
    said that nobody had done more to welcome and assist Irish writers in
    Canada than Kildare Dobbs, who made his own livelihood as a writer - of
    narrative non-fiction, books of travel, poetry, and journalism - wholly in
    Canada.

    He was born in Meerut, Uttar Pradesh, India, where his father was acting
    commissioner, but the family settled back in Ireland in a Victorian mansion
    between Castlecomer and Gowran, Co Kilkenny; Dobbs's maternal grandfather,
    John Henry Bernard, was the Protestant archbishop of Dublin and, at Lloyd
    George's urging, became provost of Trinity College
    Dublin
    in
    1919.

    Educated at St Columba's - the poet Richard
    Murphy
    and Michael Yeats
    were
    fellow students and friends - he saw no future for himself in Ireland and
    so enlisted in the Royal Navy during the second World War, escorting and
    protecting convoys and merchant ships in the Atlantic. Twice he came close
    to death: once, his vessel almost collided with a troop ship, and on
    another voyage a vicious hurricane nearly capsized his ship.


    Tanganyika
    During the decade of his first marriage, to Patricia Parsons, two sons were
    born, he attended Jesus College, Cambridge, and in 1948 the family decamped
    to east Africa, where Dobbs was posted as a district officer and magistrate
    in Tanganyika. The place seized his imagination and entered his dreams. At
    one point he intrepidly tracked man-eating lions.

    Later he was falsely and maliciously accused of stealing an elephant's
    ivory tusks and was sentenced to a minimum-security prison, with hard
    labour. The sentence was later quashed, but by then he had spent four
    months in jail.

    He returned to Ireland, but, still restless, in 1952 decided to emigrate to
    Canada, sailing steerage from Cobh. Throughout his long life, he always
    felt the tug of the Ireland he had lost. After a desultory period teaching
    in high school, he joined
    Macmillan
    publishers
    as an editor and worked there for eight years, nurturing an academy of
    writers and forming close friendships with Brian
    Moore
    (`a
    complete master'), Mordecai
    Richler
    and
    Marshall McLuhan. Dobbs was an alert and resourceful publisher.

    It was in Canada that his marriage ended in divorce, but he was given
    custody of his sons. His second marriage was to Mary McAlpine, a Vancouver
    journalist, and the couple and their two daughters spent time in Spain in
    1964 and five years later lived in Morocco.

    Other journeys - to France, Mexico (a beloved destination) and back to
    Ireland - aroused in him a wish to write travel essays, which became his
    favourite and most accomplished genre.

    An elegant stylist, Dobbs's first book, Running to Paradise (1962), won a
    Governor General's Award in Canada. He was adept at various verse-forms and
    published three collections of poetry: The Eleventh Hour (1997), Casablanca:
    The Poem (1999), and, at the age of 87, Casanova in Venice: A Raunchy
    Rhyme (2010), based loosely on Giacomo Casanova's Memoir s .

    In 1970 Dobbs collaborated with the well-known cartoonist Ronald
    Searle
    on The Great Fur Opera , a satirical history of the Hudson's Bay Company.

    Early in that decade he helped to formulate Canada's major multiculturalism
    initiative, writing policy papers and speeches for the Trudeau
    administration.


    Discerning chronicler
    A discerning chronicler, his other books include Anatolian Suite (1989),
    a travel volume that also tells the story of the Armenian genocide; a work
    of fiction, The Pride and Fall(1981), inspired by his African
    experiences; and a sparkling memoir, Running the Rapids (2005). In this
    last he wrote: `Writing memoirs is like looking at a beach where the tides
    have thrown up litter, kelp, seashells.'

    He also wrote an insightful introductory essay to accompany the photographs
    of his third wife, Linda Kooluris Dobbs, in The Gardens of The Vatican
    (2009).

    Among his other signal accomplishments were adaptations for radio of
    Dubliners andFinnegans Wake , and a year as writer in residence at the
    University of Toronto in 2002.

    As a journalist, the soft-spoken Dobbs delighted in raising issues. He
    committed much of his abundant life to the written word and was the most
    genial of companions, all the more convivial with a glass of gin at his
    elbow.

    Kildare Dobbs died of kidney and congestive heart failure in Toronto. The
    date of his demise would have prompted a memorable witticism. His ashes
    were to be brought home to Co Kilkenny.

    He is survived by his wife Linda, sons John and Christian, daughters
    Lucinda and Sarah, and sister Sally Gibbs.

    http://www.irishtimes.com/life-and-style/people/kildare-dobbs-an-accomplished-and-resourceful-writer-1.1388911

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