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Howard Engel
Howard Engel
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Howard Engel CM (April 2, 1931 – July 16, 2019) was a Canadian mystery author and CBC producer who resided in Toronto, Ontario. He was famous for his Benny Cooperman detective series, set in the Niagara Region in and around the city of Grantham, Ontario, mirroring St. Catharines, Ontario, where he was born. He was one of the founding authors of Crime Writers of Canada in 1982.[1]

Key Information

Personal life

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From 1962 to 1978 he was married to Marian Engel,[2] a noted Canadian author of literary fiction, who died in 1985. They had two children,[2] twins Charlotte and William, born in 1965. Charlotte currently is an independent television producer.[citation needed] Engel married Canadian novelist Janet Hamilton.[3][when?] The couple have one son,[citation needed] Jacob Engel, born in 1989.

In 2001, he unknowingly suffered a stroke that left him with alexia sine agraphia, a condition that prevented him from understanding written words without a major effort without affecting his ability to write.[4] He was later able to write a new novel, Memory Book (2005), in which his character Benny Cooperman suffers a blow to the head and is similarly affected.[citation needed] He later published The Man Who Forgot How To Read (2007), a memoir of the time he spent recovering from the stroke, with an afterword by Oliver Sacks (who wrote about Engel's reading problems in the book The Mind's Eye), and another novel, East of Suez, in 2008.[5]

In February 2007, Engel was appointed a Member of the Order of Canada,[citation needed] receiving it at the 100th investiture. In 2013, Engel received a Queen Elizabeth II Diamond Jubilee medal.[6] He died in Toronto on July 16, 2019, of pneumonia that arose from a stroke, at the age of 88.[6]

Bibliography

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References

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from Grokipedia
Howard Engel (April 2, 1931 – July 16, 2019) was a Canadian mystery writer known for creating the Benny Cooperman private detective series, which helped pioneer Canadian crime fiction, and for his memoir The Man Who Forgot How to Read, detailing his experience with the neurological condition alexia sine agraphia after a stroke. Born in St. Catharines, Ontario, Engel began his career as a writer, reporter, and producer at the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation, contributing to programs from locations including Paris, London, and Cyprus before turning to fiction. His debut novel, The Suicide Murders (1980), introduced Benny Cooperman, a modest Jewish private investigator operating in the fictional Ontario town of Grantham, and the series grew to 11 novels, ending with East of Suez (2008). Engel was a founding member of the Crime Writers of Canada in 1986 and received numerous accolades, including the Matt Cohen Award in 2004, appointment to the Order of Canada in 2007 as the first crime writer so honored, and the Crime Writers of Canada Grand Master Award in 2014. In July 2001, Engel suffered a stroke that caused alexia sine agraphia, leaving him unable to read while his writing ability remained intact; he re-learned to read with difficulty and drew on the experience for the Benny Cooperman novel Memory Book (2005), in which the detective awakens with the same condition, as well as his 2007 memoir with an afterword by neurologist Oliver Sacks. Engel's resilience and contributions were widely recognized for establishing a Canadian voice in the mystery genre and inspiring others through his determination to continue creating after neurological adversity. He died on July 16, 2019, at the age of 88.

Early life and education

Birth and upbringing

Howard Engel was born on April 2, 1931, in St. Catharines, Ontario, Canada. He was raised in St. Catharines, a city in the Niagara Peninsula known for its small-town character and industrial heritage during his childhood. This environment later served as the inspiration for the fictional town of Grantham in his Benny Cooperman mystery series. Engel grew up in a Jewish family within the local community, where the close-knit, modest setting of small-town Ontario shaped his early perspective. The cultural and geographical elements of his upbringing in St. Catharines influenced the authentic Canadian backdrops and character sensibilities in his later writing.

Education and early influences

Howard Engel attended McMaster University, where he earned a Bachelor of Arts degree in 1955. He later completed a secondary school teaching certificate at the Ontario College of Education in 1956. Engel described himself as an indifferent scholar during his time at McMaster. From an early age, Engel showed a strong interest in creative pursuits. Despite being born with a withered left hand, he was a promising artist who engaged in sketching and painting. In high school after the Second World War, he collaborated with his younger brother David to build a portable puppet stage and stage variety performances for charitable causes, including the Greek Relief Fund, with Engel designing and building the puppets. At summer camp, he wrote a satirical piece on Arthur Conan Doyle titled Hershlock Loams, collaborated on a brief sketch about the life of Chopin, and attempted a Gilbert and Sullivan parody set on Mars.

Broadcasting career

CBC producer role

Howard Engel served as a producer at the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation (CBC), focusing on literary and cultural programs. He began his CBC career in 1960 as a writer and reporter, later advancing to producer roles in radio programming. Engel produced and contributed to several notable non-dramatic programs, including Assignment, Sunday Supplement, The Arts in Review, Booktime, and Anthology. For a five-year period he served as executive producer of literary programs in radio for the CBC, during which he produced Anthology, the network's flagship literary program. In 1982, while still at the CBC, Engel became a founding member of the Crime Writers of Canada. His interest in mystery fiction developed in parallel with his broadcasting work during this period. He resigned from the CBC in 1985.

Literary career

Benny Cooperman series

The Benny Cooperman series is the cornerstone of Howard Engel's literary career, comprising a sequence of mystery novels centered on Benny Cooperman, a private detective based in the fictional Ontario town of Grantham, a stand-in for Engel's hometown of St. Catharines. Cooperman is portrayed as a Jewish bachelor and an atypical sleuth, characterized by self-deprecating humor, a mild-mannered and awkward demeanor, and a strong aversion to violence. Despite his timorous personality, he is tenacious, shrewd, and deeply committed to uncovering the truth and ensuring justice is served, bringing a distinctive Canadian sensibility to the genre through patient investigation and wry observation. The series launched with The Suicide Murders in 1980 and continued over the decades with The Ransom Game (1981), Murder on Location (1982), Murder Sees the Light (1984)—which received the Arthur Ellis Award for Best Novel in 1985—A City Called July (1986), A Victim Must Be Found (1988), Dead and Buried (1990), There Was an Old Woman (1993), Getting Away with Murder (1996), The Cooperman Variations (2001), Memory Book (2005), and East of Suez (2008). Set primarily in Grantham, the novels explore small-town Ontario life while emphasizing Cooperman's persistent pursuit of facts and resolution in his cases. Several entries in the series have been adapted into television movies, bringing the character to a broader audience.

Other books and memoir

Howard Engel authored works outside his Benny Cooperman detective series, including a non-fiction historical study and a memoir reflecting on his neurological condition. In 1996, he published Lord High Executioner: An Unashamed Look at Hangmen, Headsmen, and Their Kind, his first non-fiction book, which presents an anecdotal and witty social history of judicial executioners and capital punishment rituals, with particular emphasis on the British tradition of hangmen, their personal profiles, technological innovations such as drop charts, and accounts of notable or botched executions. Although Engel states his opposition to capital punishment, the book avoids polemics in favor of an entertaining, understated examination filled with ironic observations. His 2007 memoir, The Man Who Forgot How to Read, chronicles the stroke he suffered in 2001 that caused the rare condition alexia sine agraphia, which completely eliminated his ability to read while leaving his capacity to write unimpaired. Engel describes the shocking morning he awoke unable to decipher his newspaper, his subsequent diagnosis, hospitalization, and the prolonged, painstaking process of attempting to re-engage with text, all narrated with novelistic skill, self-deprecating humor, and an absence of self-pity. The book is distinguished by its medically accurate portrayal of the condition and includes an afterword by neurologist Oliver Sacks, who corresponded with Engel and expressed interest in his case due to the unusual preservation of his verbal and writing abilities as a professional writer. Engel also created cartoons under the pen name “Foo.” He drew upon his experience with alexia sine agraphia in his Benny Cooperman novel Memory Book.

Film and television contributions

Television movie adaptations

Two television movies adapted from Howard Engel's Benny Cooperman novels were produced by the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation (CBC). The first, The Suicide Murders (1985), was based on Engel's debut novel of the same name, with Engel writing the screenplay. Directed by Graham Parker and starring Saul Rubinek as the mild-mannered private detective Benny Cooperman, the film brought Engel's Jewish-Canadian sleuth to the screen for the first time. The second adaptation, Murder Sees the Light (1986), was drawn from Engel's 1984 novel of the same name, again featuring a screenplay by Engel. Directed by Harvey Hart and also starring Rubinek as Cooperman, the movie follows the detective's surveillance of a controversial preacher in hiding, which draws him into a case involving murder and darker forces. These CBC productions marked the only television movie adaptations of Engel's Benny Cooperman series, with Engel directly contributing to the screenplays for both.

Acting and other appearances

Howard Engel made occasional on-screen appearances throughout his career, primarily in small acting roles and as himself in documentaries and arts programs. He had an uncredited role as the Man at Bus Stop in the 1953 film Niagara. He also appeared in a credited acting role in the 1985 television movie The Suicide Murders, an adaptation of his own debut novel of the same name. Later in life, Engel featured as himself in several television productions. He appeared in a 2011 episode of the BBC arts documentary series Imagine. In 2013, he was featured in the documentary 15 Reasons to Live.

Personal life

Marriages and family

Howard Engel was first married to the Canadian novelist Marian Engel in 1962. The couple had twins, Charlotte and William, born in 1965. Their marriage ended in divorce in 1978. In 1978, Engel married the writer Janet Hamilton. They had one son, Jacob, born in 1989. Janet Hamilton died of brain cancer in 1998. Their daughter Charlotte Engel has worked as a television producer and production executive, including as a production executive at CBC Docs.

Stroke and acquired alexia

In July 2001, Howard Engel suffered a stroke that left him with alexia sine agraphia, a rare acquired neurological condition also known as pure alexia or alexia without agraphia, in which the ability to read is completely lost while writing ability, speech, and language comprehension remain intact. On July 31, 2001, Engel awoke to discover that the letters in his morning newspaper appeared as an unrecognizable foreign script, resembling Cyrillic or Korean characters at different moments, prompting him to realize he had experienced a stroke affecting the visual processing regions of the left occipital lobe and related pathways. The condition prevented any fluent or automatic reading of words, forcing him to laboriously decode text letter by letter, with even familiar words requiring fresh deciphering each time they appeared. Engel adapted to his reading impairment through compensatory strategies developed over time, including tracing the outlines of letters and words in the air with his finger or using his tongue to subtly form letter shapes against his teeth or the roof of his mouth, which allowed for somewhat more efficient though still very slow reading. He did not recover normal reading fluency, and he continued to rely on others—such as editors or friends—to read his drafts aloud so he could revise based on auditory feedback while maintaining his writing process. Engel drew directly from his experience in his creative work, giving his detective character Benny Cooperman the same alexia sine agraphia in the 2005 novel Memory Book, where the protagonist suffers a head injury resulting in the inability to read. He later documented his personal encounter with the condition in the 2007 memoir The Man Who Forgot How to Read, which includes an afterword by neurologist Oliver Sacks.

Awards and honours

Death and legacy

References

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