Sue Sinclair
Sue Sinclair is a Canadian poet. She was raised in St. John's, Newfoundland and Labrador,[1] and studied at Mount Allison University in Sackville, New Brunswick, graduated in 1994 and then continued her education at the University of New Brunswick. She then went on to complete an MA & PhD in Philosophy at the University of Toronto. Sinclair's first collection of poetry, Secrets of Weather and Hope (2001), was a finalist for the 2002 Gerald Lampert Award. Mortal Arguments (2003) was a finalist for the Atlantic Poetry Prize. Her third collection, The Drunken Lovely Bird, won the International Independent Publisher's Award for Poetry. Breaker was a finalist for the Pat Lowther Award and the Atlantic Poetry Prize, and Heaven's Thieves won the Pat Lowther Award.
She currently teaches in the English department at the University of New Brunswick in Fredericton.[2]
She has been the editor of The Fiddlehead since the summer of 2018.[3]
Bibliography
- Secrets of Weather and Hope (Brick Books, 2001)
- Mortal Arguments (Brick Books, 2003)
- The Drunken Lovely Bird (Goose Lane Editions, 2005)
- Breaker (Brick Books, 2008)
- Heaven's Thieves (Brick Books, 2016)
- Almost Beauty: New and Selected Poems (Goose Lane Editions, 2022)
References
- v
- t
- e
- M. Travis Lane (1981)
- Rona Murray (1982)
- Rhea Tregebov (1983)
- Bronwen Wallace (1984)
- Paulette Jiles (1985)
- Erín Moure (1986)
- Heather Spears (1987)
- Gwendolyn MacEwen (1988)
- Heather Spears (1989)
- Patricia Young (1990)
- Karen Connelly (1991)
- Kate Braid (1992)
- Lorna Crozier (1993)
- Diana Brebner (1994)
- Beth Goobie (1995)
- Lorna Crozier (1996)
- Marilyn Bowering (1997)
- Barbara Nickel (1998)
- Hilary Clark (1999)
- Esta Spalding (2000)
- Sharon Thesen (2001)
- Heather Spears (2002)
- Dionne Brand (2003)
- Betsy Struthers (2004)
- Roo Borson (2005)
- Sylvia Legris (2006)
- Sina Queyras (2007)
- Anne Simpson (2008)
- Alice Major (2009)
- Karen Solie (2010)
- Evelyn Lau (2011)
- Susan Goyette (2012)
- Rachel Rose (2013)
- Alexandra Oliver (2014)
- Sina Queyras (2015)
- Lorna Crozier (2016)
- Sue Sinclair (2017)
- Lesley Belleau (2018)
- Klara du Plessis (2019)
- Chantal Gibson (2020)
- Noor Naga (2021)
- Selina Boan (2022)
- Gillian Sze (2023)
This article about a poet from Canada is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |
- v
- t
- e