Yves Thériault
Yves Thériault (born Nov. 28, 1916, Quebec City, Que., Can.—died Oct. 20, 1983, Rawdon, Que.) was one of the most prolific writers in Canada, with some 1,300 radio and television scripts and some 50 books to his credit. He was hailed as a literary genius after the publication of Agaguk (1958), a poignant tale about an Inuit (Eskimo) family faced with the white man’s code of law.
Thériault, who dropped out of school at the age of 15, held a variety of jobs before becoming a writer for the National Film Board (1943–45) and Radio Canada (1945–50). His works include Aaron (1954), which explored the problems faced by a Jewish family in a Gentile world; Ashini (1960), a lyrical tale of the last chief of the Innu (Montagnais) to live by ancestral customs; and N’Tsuk (1968), the life story of a 100-year-old Inuit woman. Thériault’s works were widely translated and won him many awards.