Wayne Johnston
Photo Welland Tribune
At the age of 27, the young Newfoundlander Wayne Johnston won The WH Smith/Books in Canada award for the Story of Bobby O'Malley. He penned The Divine Ryans first as a novel and later as a screenplay. The movie was made in 1999.
In 2000, Johnston won the Charles Taylor Prize creative non-fiction prize for his memoir of Ferryland, an archeological site on the south shore of the Avalon Peninsula in his home province of Newfoundland.
This book, Baltimore's Mansion was a bestseller in Germany and the Netherlands as well as in Canada, where the National Post called it a "non-fiction novel."
Johnston's most recent novel is A World Elsewhere. Published in August 2011, it is already a national bestseller, a Globe and Mail Best Book. It has also been nominated for the Giller Prize.
Other well-known works include The Colony of Unrequited Dreams (1999) and The Navigator of New York (2003), which was also nominated for the Giller. Both were bestsellers.
At the age of 27, the young Newfoundlander Wayne Johnston won The WH Smith/Books in Canada award for the Story of Bobby O'Malley. He penned The Divine Ryans first as a novel and later as a screenplay. The movie was made in 1999.
In 2000, Johnston won the Charles Taylor Prize creative non-fiction prize for his memoir of Ferryland, an archeological site on the south shore of the Avalon Peninsula in his home province of Newfoundland.
This book, Baltimore's Mansion was a bestseller in Germany and the Netherlands as well as in Canada, where the National Post called it a "non-fiction novel."
Johnston's most recent novel is A World Elsewhere. Published in August 2011, it is already a national bestseller, a Globe and Mail Best Book. It has also been nominated for the Giller Prize.
Other well-known works include The Colony of Unrequited Dreams (1999) and The Navigator of New York (2003), which was also nominated for the Giller. Both were bestsellers.