Geoffrey Stevens (journalist)

Geoffrey Stevens (born 1940) is a Canadian journalist, author and educator.

Born in London, Ontario, Stevens was a longtime Ottawa columnist for The Globe and Mail and later became the paper's managing editor. He also served in the same position at Maclean's magazine.[1]

He has authored books on Canadian politics, but rose to greater national fame with his 2003 biography of noted Progressive Conservative organizer Dalton Camp, entitled, The Player: The Life and Times of Dalton Camp. Stevens was awarded the Drainie-Taylor Biography Prize by the Writers' Trust of Canada for The Player in 2004. His forthcoming work will be a biography of politician Flora MacDonald.

Stevens currently lives in Cambridge, Ontario where he is a weekly columnist for The Record of Waterloo Region and the Guelph Mercury while also teaching political science courses at the University of Guelph and Wilfrid Laurier University.[2] He also writes for Canadian online media site rabble.ca. In June 2007, Stevens was awarded an honorary Doctor of Letters degree by Laurier for his

"unique and outstanding lifelong contribution to political reporting and public discourse across Canada."[1]

Publications

  • Stanfield. Toronto: McClelland and Stewart, 1973.
  • Leaders & Lesser Mortals: Backroom Politics in Canada (with John Laschinger). Toronto: Key Porter Books, 1992.
  • No Holds Barred: My Life in Politics (with John Crosbie). Toronto: McClelland & Stewart, 1997.
  • The Player: The Life and Times of Dalton Camp. Toronto: Key Porter Books, 2003.
gollark: One person may enjoy bathing constantly and have a large lawn and stuff. One person may do showers and not garden.
gollark: You require varying quantities of water.
gollark: Mostly it's used in stuff which just *happens* to need water for production, not sold in bottles.
gollark: I mostly support just giving people money directly instead of having the government/whatever try and work out and possibly fail to guess exactly what people need.
gollark: I mean, water is used in VAST quantities (off the top of my head mostly) in industry.

References



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