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Canadian journalist and author Peter C. Newman dies at 94

Veteran Canadian journalist and author Peter C

Via AP news wire
Thursday 07 September 2023 18:30 EDT
Obit Peter Newman
Obit Peter Newman

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Veteran Canadian journalist and author Peter C. Newman, who held a mirror up to Canada, has died. He was 94.

Newman died in hospital in Belleville, Ontario, Thursday morning from complications related to a stroke he had last year and which caused him to develop Parkinsonā€™s disease, his wife Alvy Newman said by phone.

In his decades-long career, Newman served as editor-in-chief of the Toronto Star and Macleanā€™s magazine covering both Canadian politics and business.

ā€œItā€™s such a loss. Itā€™s like a library burned down if you lose someone with that knowledge,ā€ Alvy Newman said. ā€œHe revolutionized journalism, business, politics, history.ā€

Often recognized by his trademark sailorā€™s cap, Newman also wrote two dozen books and earned the informal title of Canadaā€™s ā€œmost cussed and discussed commentator,ā€ said HarperCollins, one of his publishers, in an author's note.

Political columnist Paul Wells, who for years was a senior writer at Macleanā€™s, said Newman built the publication into what it was at its peak, ā€œan urgent, weekly news magazine with a global ambit.

But more than that, Wells said, Newman created a template for Canadian political authors.

"The Canadian Establishmentā€™ books persuaded everyone ā€” his colleagues, the book-buying public ā€” that Canadian stories could be as important, as interesting, as riveting as stories from anywhere else,ā€ he said. ā€œAnd he sold truckloads of those books. My God.ā€

That series of three books ā€” the first of which was published in 1975, the last in 1998 ā€” chronicled Canadaā€™s recent history through the stories of its unelected power players.

Newman also told his own story in his 2004 autobiography, ā€œHere Be Dragons: Telling Tales of People, Passion and Power.ā€

He was born in Vienna in 1929 and came to Canada in 1940 as a Jewish refugee. In his biography, Newman describes being shot at by Nazis as he waited on the beach at Biarritz, France, for the ship that would take him to freedom.

ā€œNothing compares with being a refugee; you are robbed of context and you flail about, searching for self-definition,ā€ he wrote. ā€œWhen I ultimately arrived in Canada, what I wanted was to gain a voice. To be heard. That longing has never left me.ā€

That, he said, is why he became a writer.

The Writersā€™ Trust of Canada said Newmanā€™s 1963 book ā€œRenegade in Power: The Diefenbaker Yearsā€ about former Prime Minister John Diefenbaker had ā€œrevolutionized Canadian political reporting with its controversial ā€˜insiders-tell-allā€™ approach.ā€

Newman was appointed to the Order of Canada in 1978 and promoted to the rank of companion in 1990, recognized as a ā€œchronicler of our past and interpreter of our present.ā€

Newman won some of Canadaā€™s most illustrious literary awards, along with seven honorary doctorates, according to his HarperCollins profile.

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