Bert Archer is a Canadian author, journalist, travel writer, essayist and critic.
Background
Archer was born in Montreal and lived in Calgary and Vancouver before attending Saint Michael"s University School in Victoria, British Columbia, the University of Saint Michael"s College at the University of Toronto, and Trinity College, Dublin.
Career
He was editor of his college"s arts journal, The Grammateion in his second undergraduate year, and as editor-in-chief of The Mike, the college newspaper, a year later. The year after that, he was president of the Ontario region of the Canadian University Press, North America"s oldest national student organization. While still in school he worked as an assistant to editor David Colbert at Harper & Collins Canada.
In 1994, he was hired as an editorial assistant by Quill & Quire, Canada"s national book trade magazine.
Two years later, as review editor, Archer was pressured to resign after writing an essay in the Financial Post which some considered derogatory to certain elements in the Canadian publishing industry, specifically, the small presses. He was subsequently hired as a columnist for the Toronto Star, Canada"s largest circulation newspaper, to review books published by small Canadian publishers.
Since then, Archer has been an editor at the alternative arts magazine National Organization for Women and the now defunct Eye Weekly. An article written by Archer in Eye Weekly suggests that groping or touching another person without their consent should be legal.
That same year Archer wrote another article for Eye Weekly titled Keeping Animals in Their Place.
He is the author of The End of Gay (and the death of heterosexuality), published in Canada in 1999, in the United States in 2002 and the United Kingdom in 2004. The book argues that there is no such thing as inherent sexual identity, and that sexual behaviour is a product of many factors, personal will not least among them. Archer has also contributed chapters to several books: "Why Boys Are Better Than Girls" for What I Meant to Say (2006), Creating a Toronto of the Imagination for uTOpia (2006), as well as chapters for its follow-up, GreenTOpia (2007), and a book about water called HtO (2008), excerpted in the National Post.