- James Audain
James Audain (born 1903 in
Bournemouth, England ) was a soldier, author, and racehorse breeder/owner. Educated atWellington College, Berkshire and theRoyal Military Academy Sandhurst , he became acavalry officer.Audain eventually moved to
Canada where he lived inVictoria, British Columbia onVancouver Island for much of his life. A writer, he served as president of theCraigdarroch Castle Society and the Victoria and Islands branch of theCanadian Authors Association . He published abiography about his family called "Coal Mine to Castle: The Story of the Dunsmuirs of Vancouver Island" (New York: Pageant Press, 1955).Audain continued in a somewhat revelatory mode with his book about 'problem drinkers' entitled "Courage to Change The Things We Can" (New York: 1960), which focuses on a group of people recovering from alcoholism in the
Alcoholics Anonymous program inLondon during the late 1950s. Audain's "My Borrowed Life" (Gray's Publishing, 1962) is an autobiography dealing with his own alcoholism, supplemented with material on both the author's parents' families. He also self-published "Alex Dunsmuir's Dilemma" (Victoria: Sunnylane Publishing, 1964), about his great-uncle Alexander.He was also a breeder of
thoroughbred racehorses.Audain was an unsuccessful candidate for the Social Credit Party in the 1962 Canadian federal election for the riding of Victoria.
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