Gural, Altaire

Altaire Gural is a member of the Playwrights Guild of Canada, with her play Forgotten having been performed by schools and theatres in Canada, the U.S, England, Scotland and Australia. She received an Ontario Arts Council Grant to turn Forgotten into a novel, which is almost completed, as well as developing several screenplays for limited series and features. In her non-writing life , Altaire is a professional acting coach with students in lead roles in film and television, and directs plays for youth theatres in the Kawartha Lakes and elsewhere. https://equityintheatre.com/member/altaire

https://www.thestar.com/local-kawartha-lakes/life/2021/12/17/kawartha-lakes-and-area-authors-share-their-views-of-time-and-place.html

https://www.thestar.com/local-kawartha-lakes/life/2021/12/17/kawartha-lakes-and-area-authors-share-their-views-of-time-and-place.html

https://www.thestar.com/local-kawartha-lakes/life/2021/12/17/kawartha-lakes-and-area-authors-share-their-views-of-time-and-place.html

https://www.thestar.com/local-kawartha-lakes/life/2021/12/17/kawartha-lakes-and-area-authors-share-their-views-of-time-and-place.html

http://www.mykawartha.com/whatson-story/6117403-lindsay-playwright-s-work-featured-on-manhattan-stage/

http://www.mykawartha.com/whatson-story/5178574-kawartha-lakes-playwright-takes-trip-beyond-neverland/

http://m.ourwindsor.ca/whatson-story/6368629-lindsay-playwright-s-work-gets-scottish-spotlight

Kevin Frank

Kevin Frank is a cartoonist and graphic novelist.

Author website: http://kevinfrank.net

Laugh-out-loud funny! Perfect read aloud and a wonderful companion to any story time circle. Graphic novel format introduces visual storytelling alongside humorous dialog and plot.
This fully illustrated middle grade graphic novel for kids who like silly books will take you on a swashbuckling journey like no other! Join a comical cast of backyard pets – Captain Hooktail, First Mate Chubs, Helmsman Patch and Tinkles – as they hunt for treasure (at the local butshop) and fight with sworn enemies (alley cats!).

Scurvy Dogs
True North
Balaam’s Chicken
Alex and the four-headed gargantuan

Fleming, Rae Bruce (1944-2022)

From RB Fleming’s website:

R B Fleming (MA, PhD) is a biographer and historian whose published works include two local histories, Eldon Connections (1975) and Argyle, A Pioneer Village (1976); a biography of a Sir William Mackenzie (The Railway King of Canada, 1991); a picture book about Canadians who came out to see King George VI and Queen Elizabeth in 1939 (The Royal Tour of Canada, 2002); and a well illustrated book about Canadian general stores called General Stores of Canada: Merchants and Memories. He has edited several books, including Boswell’s Children, The Art of the Biography (1994), which includes his own essay on Mackenzie; and The Wartime Letters of Leslie & Cecil Frost, for which Fleming wrote an extensive Introduction. His latest book is Peter Gzowski, A Biography, an acclaimed portrait of one of Canada’s greatest broadcast journalists.

http://www.rbfleming.net

Obituary for Rae Fleming

May 17, 1944 – April 25, 2022 (https://www.legacy.com/ca/obituaries/mykawartha/name/rae-fleming-obituary?pid=202015573)
Local historian, author, and lecturer, Rae Bruce Fleming passed away in Lindsay April 25, 2022. Born to parents Victor and Myrtle (Mitchell) Fleming, Rae grew up and lived most of his life in Argyle. He authored several books of local history and biography, among them Eldon Connections: Portrait of a Township; The Railway King of Canada, Sir William Mackenzie, 1849-1923; Gzowski: A Biography; and most recently edited and contributed to Looking for Old Victoria County and its sequel, More Surprising and Intriguing Things About Old Victoria County. A dedicated world traveller and swimmer, Rae was active in many historical societies and organizations including The Lindsay Canadian Club, The College Community Choir, as well as his book club and “coffee klatch.” Rae is predeceased by his parents and sister Helen (late George) Cameron. He is survived by his niece, Jane (Garry) Veale, great niece and nephews Joanna (Rob) Jeffery, John (Ashley) Veale, and Geoff Veale as well as five great-great nieces.

Dorothe Comber

Born Dorothe Mary St. George Comber on November 4, 1902 in Bobcaygeon, she was the only child of Walter Thomas Comber and Georgina Amelia St. George.

Dorothe attended school at her father’s private primary school, Hill Croft School in Bobcaygeon. She attended school in Lindsay and then progressed to the University of Toronto. She graduated in 1939 and became a teacher in Arnprior and Wingham (Heron County.)

When she retired, she returned to Bobcaygeon, where she lived next door to another Kawartha Lakes writer, Harry van Oudenaren.

Around the time of the country’s centennial celebrations, Comber, with a committee, captured Bobcaygeon’s history in the booklet, Bobcaygeon History: Amy Ellen Cosh Memorial. The book was dedicated in rememberance of Amy Cosh, beloved librarian to Bobcaygeon and friend to Comber.

In 1977, Comber recorded an interview with Doug Tangney, discussing some of Bobcaygeon’s history.

The Hill Croft School was started by Walter and Georgina Comber as a private school for the boy children of the Boyd family. Then, it was a “school for small boys.” When the boys aged, it became a high school, operated by the Combers until 1918. In 1929 the building was reopened and operated as Bobcaygeon Continuation School until 1956. From 1958 to 1976 the building was Hillcroft Private Hospital, owned and operated by Lorne and Orlie Stewart. Then in 1976 the building became Hillcroft Haven retirement home until the 1990s and then it became a medical centre, i.e. a cluster of offices for doctors. Now it stands abandoned.

After the school ceased at Hill Croft, Walter Comber went to teach at Ashbury College and then at the Lower School of Ridley College in Toronto. Walter was born in England in 1874 and had been educated at King’s School, St. Bury Edmond’s and Wadham College, Oxford. He joined the staff at Ridley in 1919 and was considered one of “Ontario’s finest history teachers. The Lower School loved him and would miss him greatly.” (Ridley: a Canadian School, Richard A. Bradley and Paul E. Lewis, 2000.)

Georgina was born in 1870 in Ireland and emigrated to Canada when she was seven. She married Walter Comber in 1900.

Dorothe Comber passed away on November 1, 1982. She left her collection of history about her family, the Boyd family and Bobcaygeon to her friend Harry van Oudenaren.

Book:

Bobcaygeon History: Amy Ellen Cosh Memorial, 1972.

FURTHER:

Bobcaygeon: a picture book of memories, Harry van Oudenaren (1992).