Morley Callaghan (born Sept. 22, 1903, Toronto, Ont., Can.—died Aug. 25, 1990, Toronto) was a Canadian novelist and short-story writer.
Callaghan attended the University of Toronto (B.A., 1925) and Osgoode Hall Law School (LL.B., 1928). He never practiced law, but he became a full-time writer in 1928 and won critical acclaim for his short stories collected in A Native Argosy (1929). Later collections of stories include Morley Callaghan’s Stories (1959) and No Man’s Meat and The Enchanted Pimp (1978).
Strange Fugitive (1928), the first of Callaghan’s more than 10 novels, describes the destruction of a social misfit, a type that recurs in Callaghan’s fiction. His novels examine questions of morality and social class, and his later works show an emphasis on Christian love as an answer to social injustice, as in Such Is My Beloved (1934), They Shall Inherit the Earth (1935), The Loved and the Lost (1951), and A Passion in Rome (1961). He published little in the 1940s, turning his hand to playwriting and to work with the Canadian Broadcasting Company. Notable among his later works are That Summer in Paris (1963), a memoir of Callaghan’s days in Paris in 1929 and his friendship with F. Scott Fitzgerald and Ernest Hemingway, and A Fine and Private Place (1975), the story of an author who wants artistic recognition in his own country. The critic Edmund Wilson referred to Callaghan as the most unjustly neglected writer in the English language.