Michael David O'Brien is a Canadian author, artist, and essayist and lecturer on faith and culture. Born in Ottawa, he is self-taught, without an academic background. He writes and speaks on Catholic themes and topics, and creates the cover art for his novels in a neo-Byzantine style. He lives with his family in Combermere, Ontario, Canada. O'Brien's books have been published in a number of foreign languages, including Croatian, Czech, French, German, Italian, Lithuanian, Polish, Spanish, and Swedish.
Early life
O'Brien was born in Ottawa and lived in Kugluktuk from ages 12 to 16. He attended a residential school in Inuvik, where he says he was abused by a dormitory supervisor. He graduated from grade 12 at St Patrick's College High School only with difficulty. As a youth, he was agnostic, leaning towards atheism, until his conversion to Catholicism when he was 21. He began to draw and paint shortly after, and had a successful gallery exhibition. Five years later, at the urging of his wife, he began to turn his artwork towards religious subjects. In 1994, at the age of 46, he began to write, although he had never been a writer before.
Theophilos - Historic fiction centered on Theophilos, here portrayed as the adoptive father of St. Luke the Evangelist.
Winter Tales
A Father's Tale - Canadian bookseller Alex Graham is a middle-age widower whose quiet life is turned upside down when his college-age son disappears without any explanation or trace of where he has gone. With minimal resources, the father begins a long journey that takes him for the first time away from his safe and orderly world.
Voyage to Alpha Centauri - Set eighty years in the future, an expedition is sent from the planet Earth to Alpha Centauri, the star closest to our solar system. The Kosmos, a great ship that the central character Neil de Hoyos describes as a "flying city", is immense in size and capable of more than half light-speed. Hoyos, a Nobel Prize–winning physicist who has played a major role in designing the ship, signs on as a passenger.
Strangers and Sojourners - An agnostic Englishwoman and Catholic Irishman both flee from their pasts to Canada in the 1930s, where they live out their lives as "Strangers and Sojourners in a foreign land..."
Plague Journal - Set in Canada; it is written in the form of the diary of a Catholic newsletter editor who is framed for murder by the forces of Antichrist.
A Cry of Stone - Rose Wâbos, abandoned as an infant, is raised by her grandmother, Oldmary Wâbos, in the remotest regions of the northern Ontario wilderness. The story covers a period from 1940 to 1973, chronicling Rose's growth to womanhood, her discovery of art, her moving out into the world of cities and sophisticated cultural circles.
Sophia House - Depicts the experiences of the young David Schäfer/Fr. Elijah while being sheltered by Pawel Tarnowski, a Polish Catholic during the Second World War.
Elijah in Jerusalem - A sequel to Father Elijah.
Non-fiction
O'Brien's articles and lectures focus on his belief that Western civilization is in severe decline as well as heading towards a "New Totalitarianism." A significant amount of his writing appeared first in Nazareth Journal, of which he was founding editor. O'Brien's book A Landscape with Dragons: The Battle for Your Child's Mind - described as controversial by its publisher - presents his concern that contemporary children's literature and culture has strayed from Christian ethics to a more pagan ideology where good and evil is not strongly defined. The book features O'Brien's examination of fantasy works ranging from C. S. Lewis' The Chronicles of Narnia and J. R. R. Tolkien's The Lord of the Rings to Anne McCaffrey's Dragonriders of Pern. One of the book's central claims is that any story in which dragons are presented sympathetically rather than as forces of evil is implicitly anti-Christian, because of the traditional use of the dragon as a symbol for Satan. O'Brien has been critical of J. K. Rowling's Harry Potter series, comparing it unfavourably with the work of J. R. R. Tolkien. O'Brien's non-fiction works include:
The Mysteries of the Most Holy Rosary )
A Landscape with Dragons: The Battle for Your Child's Mind
Remembrance of the Future: Reflections on Our Times
Arriving Where We Started: Faith and Culture in the Postmodernist Age
Much of O'Brien's non-fiction, and some of his fiction, has been published by Justin Press, a Catholic publishing house in Ottawa founded in 2009. The majority of his fiction, and some of his non-fiction, has been published by Ignatius Press, a Catholic publishing house founded in 1974 in San Francisco. Other books by O'Brien have been published by Wiseblood Books and one of its imprints, Divine Providence Press.