Anne Laurel Carter
Anne Laurel Carter grew up in Don Mills. She’s been a librarian, an ESL and FSL teacher, and milked cows in a dairy. The ideas for her 19 books came from her experiences, interviews of interesting people or from her imagination. She divides her time between Toronto Island and Nova Scotia and if she’s not reading or walking a beach, she’s out for a bike ride or playing the ukulele.
Victor Enns
Victor Enns was born in Winnipeg and raised in southern Manitoba. He graduated from the University of Manitoba with a History/English major. A founding Board member of the Manitoba Writer’s Guild, he was the Executive Director of the Saskatchewan Writers Guild, and founder of Windscript magazine. He spent the next 20 years in arts administration, including 4 years as the Executive Director of the Manitoba Arts Council, while raising a family. He founded Rhubarb magazine. Lucky Man, (Hagios, 2005) was nominated for the McNally Robinson Manitoba Book of the Year Award.
Luanne Armstrong
Luanne Armstrong has written twenty books. She writes young adult books, fiction, nonfiction and poetry. She has contributed to many anthologies and edited a Canadian non-fiction anthology called Slice Me Some Truth. She has been nominated or won many awards, including the Moonbeam Award; the Chocolate Lily Award; the Hubert Evans Non-fiction Prize; the Red Cedar Award; Surrey Schools Book of the Year Award; the Sheila Egoff Book Prize and the Silver Birch Prize. Luanne presently lives on her farm on Kootenay Lake. Her previous book from Caitlin was The Light Through the Trees.
Nanci Lee
Nanci Lee is a poet and adult educator from Halifax working with savings groups in Africa and Asia. Her poems have been published in various journals including Matrix Magazine, Antigonish Review, the Fiddlehead, the Literary Review of Canada, Free Fall, Quills, Contemporary Verse2, Her Royal Majesty. In 2009 she won the Halifax CBC poetry face-off and in 2008 the Writer’s Federation of Nova Scotia’s unpublished manuscript prize for poetry. In May, 2010, she was the Wallace Stegner Resident in Eastend, Saskatchewan and attended Banff Writing Studio.
Leona Theis
Leona Theis's most recent novel, If Sylvie Had Nine Lives (Freehand, 2020), offers her protagonist nine different chances to "get life right". Leona's first book, Sightlines, linked stories that form a portrait of a town, won two Saskatchewan Book Awards. Excerpts from her novel The Art of Salvage were shortlisted for novella awards on both the east and west coasts of Canada. Her personal essays have been published in literary magazines in Canada and the United States, won creative nonfiction awards from the CBC and Prairie Fire Magazine, and been nominated for a Pushcart Prize. Her stories have appeared in numerous magazines and anthologies, including The Journey Prize Stories, and American Short Fiction, where her work won the story prize. She lives in Saskatoon, on Treaty 6 territory.
Shelley A. Leedahl
Shelley A. Leedahl is a prolific multi-genre writer. Her most recent books are The Moon Watched It All; I Wasn't Always Like This; Listen, Honey; Wretched Beast; and The House of the Easily Amused. In 2020 she was the recipient of a Canada Council for the Arts' Digital Originals grant. Leedahl has been the recipient of a number of national and international Fellowships. The Saskatchewan-born and raised writer now lives in Ladysmith on Vancouver Island.
Peter Such
Peter Such was born in England and came as a youngster to Canada in 1953. He graduated from Victoria College, University of Toronto (M.A. 1966). He has written a CBC prime time tv series, Homefires; an award-winning film documentary, Free Dive; plays, opera librettos, academic works, poetry, short stories, nonfiction and 5 novels. He is a founding member of The Writers' Union of Canada and founding vice-president of CMPA. He is married to artist Joyce Kline. He is currently President of the Victoria College of Art, and Past President of the Victoria Arts Council.
Lisa Potvin
Born in Bistroff par Grotsenquin, France, Liza Potvin has lived in Denmark, Korea, India, Japan and Southeast Asia. With a Ph.D from McMaster University in 1991, she has taught at Malaspina University-College in Nanaimo. Her first book White Lies (for my mother) is an autobiography about incest and the victim's longing for her mother's help. White Lies won the Edna Staebler Award in Creative Non-Fiction.
Elaine Hammond
Elaine Breault Hammond, the author of the best-selling The Secret Under the Whirlpool, Under the Waterfall, and Explosion at Dawson Creek, has lived in six provinces as well as in the United States. She and her family lived on Prince Edward Island. Now she divides her time between PEI in the summertime and Kingston, Ontario, the rest of the year, where she is close to four of her seven grandchildren.
Barbara Klar
Barbara Klar’s first book, The Night You Called Me a Shadow, won the Gerald Lampert Award. The Blue Field, her second book, was nominated for the 1999 Saskatchewan Book Award for Poetry. Klar is also the author of the chapbook, Tower Road, from JackPine Press. Cypress is her third collection. She recently relocated from west-central Saskatchewan to Eastend, where she is working on a new poetry manuscript and a collection of essays.