Showing posts with label Michael Van Rooy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Michael Van Rooy. Show all posts

Friday, January 28, 2011

A Note from NOWW re Michael Van Rooy

Those of us who met Michael last weekend at the launch of the NOWW electronic writer-in-residence program found him to be charming, upbeat, and excited about writing. It’s difficult to comprehend the loss of such a vital and vibrant presence. His death is a great loss to the arts community.


As we learn more information about memorials and condolences, we’ll share that with you.

The activities of the electronic writer-in-residence program are on hold as we consider ways to honour Michael's contribution and the excitement he helped create

Sad News. Death of Michael Van Rooy at 42.

I was shocked to hear of the death of Michael Van Rooy.  Van Rooy was in Thunder Bay last weekend for his first meeting as writer in residence here. The following is from the Winnipeg Free Press.

A rising star in Winnipeg’s literary community died Thursday morning in Montreal.


Michael Van Rooy was on a book tour promoting his most recent novel, A Criminal to Remember, when he apparently suffered a heart attack. He was 42.

At the time he was in the company of fellow Winnipeg writer David Annandale.

"We at Turnstone are still in shock," said associate publisher Jamis Paulson, whose literary house, Turnstone Press, has published all three of Van Rooy’s Monty Haaviko thrillers since 2005.

"Michael was truly an impeccable person. He wasn’t just our writer, he was our friend."

Last year Van Rooy was selected as one of the City of Winnipeg’s arts ambassadors for its 2010 Cultural Capital of Canada campaign. He had signed with Turnstone to write a fourth Haaviko book.

The first one, An Ordinary Decent Criminal, came out last year in the U.S. with Thomas Dunne Books, an imprint of St. Martin’s Press.

Aqua Books owner Kelly Hughes, who sat on the jury that elected Van Rooy as arts ambassador, praised him as a "gentle giant" who said never turned down a request or professional opportunity.


"He was an accommodating, gracious and humble person," Hughes said. "It was striking for someone so physically imposing."

Van Rooy is survived by his wife, Laura Neufeld, and their three children.