David Heap pays tribute:
The book world suffered a serious loss this
week with the death of author, illustrator, and commentator Don Donovan.
Don had been ill for some time but typically continued writing, commentating
and deriding newspaper editors right to the end.
Leaving school in 1948 at the age of 15 and
seriously under-educated (his words)
Don started life in south London wanting to go to art school but because of
family ‘poverty’ joined a commercial art studio and was thereafter, variously a
messenger boy, commercial artist and typographer. Eventually, in 1960, Don made
his way to New Zealand when he heard the trout fishing was good!
He never regretted his decision to come to New
Zealand and occasionally observed that his times as an evacuee to the Surrey
countryside during the worst of the London bombing sowed the seed of his love
for quiet open spaces which he rediscovered here. The opening pages
of his first major book ‘New Zealand Odyssey’ give the reader some idea of
his appreciation of this country, and
his approach to his art and writing.
Don started work in New Zealand advertising in
1960 eventually becoming managing director of one of our largest advertising
companies; he was also a proprietor and shareholder and central to many
memorable campaigns – Cookie Bear being one of the more recognisable!
He left the industry in 1990 when the company was
bought out by American interests, and it is tempting to remember Don as a doyen
of the advertising world as he certainly made his mark there. But the timing of
his departure from the advertising industry was brilliant: at that point his
first book had been published, the next was on the way and, unknown to us all,
a Donovan writing, illustrating and publishing industry was about to be
launched! At the time of
his death over 30
publications in a variety of genre have been produced and a wide range of his
illustratons are available through his blog. He took to the social media with
gusto and was an early exponent of self publishing and selling – something
often forgotten or ignored by budding authors.
But Don wasn’t just someone interested in writing
and publishing. Don loved books per se.
Anyone who has been to his home will understand why he was
never sure if the walls held the book collection or the books supported
the walls. It has always been this way apparently. Don had a weakness for books
which bordered on obsession.
In the early days all his reading was of books
from the public library. It was wartime and they were more often than not
dog-eared, stained, bound and rebound. But that was of no consequence, it was
the magic of their contents that mattered. Long John Silver, Biggles, Jules
Verne came alive on the page!
Later he started to buy rather than borrow and he
moved on to more serious stuff: the final stage of his bookish obsession was to
become a collector. He never threw a book away so in that sense collected. But
there’s a deeper meaning to ‘collector’. It means having something rare or
special and prized. To the reading of a book it adds values like the feel of a
beautiful binding or the triumph of having acquired something desirable at a
fraction of its value.
In recent years,
Don was a regular guest on The Panel on
Radio NZ programme, Afternoons. On Don’s (final?) appearance in late March,
when Jim Mora asked what he was up to, Don said “I’m busy dying” and spoke
calmly and with dignity about his condition.
And now Don’s library having expanded to be part
of the structure of his house gives pleasure to his family as it gave pleasure
to the collector.
Don is survived by Pat, whom he married in 1955,
two daughters and four grandchildren.
The news yesterday of Don Donovan’s passing was very affecting for me and my wife Diane.
ReplyDeleteDon and I worked together at Carlton Carruthers du Chateau in Wellington in the later 1960s and we kept in touch because of a mutual love of books and writing.
Last year I asked Don for some reminiscences about life in advertising agencies when he started in the business for an essay I was writing for Peter Alsop’s Promoting Prosperity and with his reply we renewed what had been a desultory correspondence over the years.
Early this year I emailed Don and Pat to see if they’d be at home when Diane and I were going to be in Auckland in early May. “Will you be around?” I wrote, thinking he might be on a painting expedition somewhere. The quick response said he might not be around at all, having just been diagnosed with incurable cancer.
As it turned out, he was still around when we visited them on their beautiful Albany property on 10 May. The Lockwood’s wooden walls hidden behind books and Don’s evocative watercolours, we spent a cheerful half an hour with him propped up in bed, his music earphones at the ready. We talked about advertising, the intervening years, and he wanted to know about our writing and publishing projects. There was a firm handshake for me, a kiss for Diane and before putting on the earphones again he said, with a half smile and not an ounce of self-pity, “I hope I don’t wake up tomorrow”. His wish has been granted but, as I said to him as we left, “a great many people will be very sad indeed when that happens”.
We enjoyed a longer chat over coffee with Pat and daughter Philippa during our visit and now send our heartfelt sympathy to them and all their family.
Ian F Grant
The news yesterday of Don Donovan’s passing was very affecting for me and my wife Diane.
ReplyDeleteDon and I worked together at Carlton Carruthers du Chateau in Wellington in the later 1960s and we kept in touch because of a mutual love of books and writing.
Last year I asked Don for some reminiscences about life in advertising agencies when he started in the business for an essay I was writing for Peter Alsop’s Promoting Prosperity and with his reply we renewed what had been a desultory correspondence over the years.
Early this year I emailed Don and Pat to see if they’d be at home when Diane and I were going to be in Auckland in early May. “Will you be around?” I wrote, thinking he might be on a painting expedition somewhere. The quick response said he might not be around at all, having just been diagnosed with incurable cancer.
As it turned out, he was still around when we visited them on their beautiful Albany property on 10 May. The Lockwood’s wooden walls hidden behind books and Don’s evocative watercolours, we spent a cheerful half an hour with him propped up in bed, his music earphones at the ready. We talked about advertising, the intervening years, and he wanted to know about our writing and publishing projects. There was a firm handshake for me, a kiss for Diane and before putting on the earphones again he said, with a half smile and not an ounce of self-pity, “I hope I don’t wake up tomorrow”. His wish has been granted but, as I said to him as we left, “a great many people will be very sad indeed when that happens”.
We enjoyed a longer chat over coffee with Pat and daughter Philippa during our visit and now send our heartfelt sympathy to them and all their family.
Ian F Grant