Van Camp began his career as an intern on the writing staff of the television series North of 60, produced by the CBC. He was also a CBC script and cultural consultant for four seasons.[5] He has published several short story collections. Most of his work is set in the community of Fort Simmer, a fictionalization of his hometown.[2] He has also published children's books, poetry and educational graphic novels.[6] He worked with the Healthy Aboriginal Network to create and edit graphic novels.[7] Van Camp's writing has been influenced by the tradition of oral storytelling. He has stated:
"I need oral storytelling in my life as a listener because I'm always filtering the pauses, the slang, the rockabilly of pacing, the delivery. When I listen to a master storyteller or someone just sharing a story, I'm studying how they're talking and how they're standing, and what the pitch is in their voice. I can sometimes take their techniques and put them into a story."[8]
Van Camp was the first Dogrib writer to publish a novel. At 24 he published The Lesser Blessed, which was later adapted for film and released in 2012. One of Van Camp's short stories, "Dogrib Midnight Runners", was re-imagined as a film directed by Zoe Leigh Hopkins called Mohawk Midnight Runners. The film was released in 2013 through Big Soul Productions. The story appears in Van Camp's short story collection The Moon Letting Go (2013). In 2018, his novella When We Play Our Drums, They Sing was published alongside Monique Gray Smith's Lucy & Lola in the compilation The Journey Forward.[9] The book was named as a shortlisted finalist for the Burt Award for First Nations, Métis and Inuit Literature. His short fiction collection, Moccasin Square Gardens, was published in 2019.[10]
In June 2014 Van Camp was announced as a juror for the NSK Neustadt Prize for Children's Literature. His finalist nominee was Little You artist Julie Flett. Van Camp was the 2017 Edmonton Metro Libraries writer in residence.[5]
Van Camp was awarded the R. Ross Arnett Award for Children's Literature for his children's book Little You.[11] He was also the winner of the 2013 and 2020 Georges Bugnet Award for Fiction for his short story collections Godless but Loyal to Heaven and Moccasin Square Gardens, respective.[12] Van Camp was shortlisted for the ReLit Award for Short Fiction in 2010 for The Moon of Letting Go, in 2016 for Night Moves, and in 2020 for Moccasin Square Gardens.[13]
Personal life
Van Camp is half Dogrib through his mother and half white through his father.[14][15] As of 2023, Van Camp was based in Edmonton, Canada with his wife and son.[16]
^"Comic tackles sexual health". Yellowknifer, April 29, 2011.
^Wilson, Jordan (December 2008). "An interview with Richard Van Camp". Canadian Literature A Quarterly of Criticism and Review. Canadian Literature. Retrieved 2 December 2014.