Steven Laffoley (born 5 October 1965) is a Canadian author of creative nonfiction and fiction, and educator.
Writing
Steven Laffoley an award-winning author of fiction and creative-nonfiction. His Hunting Halifax was shortlisted for the 2008 Atlantic Independent Booksellers' Choice Award and the 2008 Evelyn Richardson Memorial Non-Fiction Award.[1] Both The Devil And The Deep Blue Sea and Shadowboxing topped the Nova Scotia Bestsellers List,[2] with the former being shortlisted for the 2012 Arthur Ellis Award for Best Crime Nonfiction[3] and the latter winning the 2013 Evelyn Richardson Nonfiction Award.[4] His novel, The Blue Tattoo, also garnered much critical and commercial success. "It's a big story that everyone should read", noted the Atlantic Books Today. "It deepens one's appreciation for the parts of the city touched by the devastation of December 6, 1917".[5]
Critical response
Laffoley has been lauded for his signature cinematic retelling of historical events by interweaving himself into the story as a writer/detective character. Critic Thomas Hodd from the Telegraph-Journal wrote that Laffoley injects "first person, post-modern narrative as he recounts his investigative process and offers reflections on the facts as they reveal themselves".[6] Another critic from The Coast applauded him for his mastery in weaving together "the main story" and "contemporaneous scenes" in his books that make for "intriguing context".[7] Laffoley often chooses stories lesser known to the public, predominantly Canadian in subject, and almost always set around the turn of the 20th century. When asked about the inspiration behind his book Shadowboxing, he said he was fascinated with the fact that George Dixon, who seemed so influential in the boxing and wider communities of Canada and the United States, had not yet had a biography written.[8] According to a review by fellow writer Jenna Conter, Laffoley is the "Stephen King of Halifax"[9] because his unique writing style gives his works a cinematic quality, both vivid and imaginative.