Nisha Rathode (Editor)

Brian Brett

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Name
  
Brian Brett

Role
  
Poet


Brian Brett httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Born
  
28 April 1950 (age 73) (
1950-04-28
)

Books
  
Uproar's your only music, The Fungus Garden

Education
  
Simon Fraser University

Brian brett


Brian Brett (born 28 April 1950) is a Canadian poet and novelist. He studied literature at Simon Fraser University from 1969 to 1974. Writing and publishing since the late 1960s, he has also been involved in an editorial capacity with several publishing firms such as the Governor-General's Award winning Blackfish Press.

Contents

Brian Brett wwwbrianbrettcawpcontentuploads20130518bri

Brian brett reading from in the flesh on salt spring island


Biography

Brian Brett Brian Brett

In the early 1970s, Brett began working as a freelance journalist and critic for various publications and newspapers, including The Globe and Mail, the Toronto Star, the Vancouver Sun, The New Reader, Books in Canada, the Victoria Times-Colonist and Vancouver's The Province—where he was the poetry critic for two years, and had his own column. His journalism has appeared in almost every major newspaper in Canada, and his essays in most of the major magazines. For a decade he wrote a monthly newspaper column called CultureWatch for the Yukon News.

Brian Brett Brian Brett

Brett inaugurated the B.C. Poetry-in-the-Schools program, introducing children in schools to world poetry for a period of several years, and has taught or given workshops on writing across Canada. He has been a member of organizations ranging from P.E.N. International, the League of Canadian Poets, the Federation of BC Writers, to the Writers' Union of Canada. While a member of the League of Canadian Poets he performed a national reading tour under their auspices. He has also given readings on CBC Radio and various other media as well as public performances funded by private organizations, universities, Harbourfront, Vancouver International Writers Festival, Saltwater Festival, Sechelt Writers’ Festival, Wordfest: Banff Calgary International Writers Festival, the Winnipeg International Writers Festival, National Book Festival, and the Canada Council. In May 2005, Brett became chair of the Writers' Union of Canada.

Brian Brett Brian Brett pens memoir about his pet African grey parrot Tuco

He lives on his farm on Salt Spring Island, British Columbia.

Brian Brett Brian Brett

In his 2004 memoir Uproar's Your Only Music, Brett wrote about growing up with a rare endocrine disorder known as Kallmann syndrome, meaning that his body does not naturally produce sex hormones. By the age of 20, he had still not entered puberty, and was believed by his parents and doctors to be intersex until his Kallmann diagnosis. He began taking testosterone in adulthood.

In November 2009, Brett won Canada's Writers' Trust Non-Fiction Prize for Trauma Farm: A Rebel History of Rural Life. The book describes a typical day in the life of his farm, with insight into the natural history of farming. The jury called the book “a lively, well-researched blend of memoir and socio-political commentary; a rare celebration of youth, age, and the tumultuous, surprising journey between them.”

In 2016, the Writers' Trust of Canada awarded Brett the Matt Cohen Lifetime Award to honour his body of work.

Discography

  • Night Directions for the Lost- The Talking Songs of Brian Brett Tongue & Groove Records - 2003
  • Talking Songs by Scattered Bodies - 2014
  • Anthologies

  • Poems from Planet Earth, (Poetry), Leaf Press, Winter 2013
  • In The Flesh, Twenty Writers Explore the Body, (Essays) Brindle & Glass, ed. by Lynne Van Luven & Kathy Page, 2011
  • Measure of the Year, (introduction), by Roderick Haig-Brown, Touchwood Editions, 2011
  • The Heart Does Break: Canadian Writers on Grief and Mourning, (Essays) Random House. Ed. By George Bowering and Jean Baird. Random House. 2009
  • Open Wide Wilderness: Canadian Nature Poems, Wilfrid Laurier Press, ed. by Nancy Holmes. 2009
  • A Verse Map of Vancouver ed. By George McWhirter, Anvil Press, 2009.
  • Wild Rivers of the Yukon’s Peel Watershed: A Traveller’s Guide (Poetry & Prose), Juri Peepre and Sarah Locke, 2008.
  • Writing The West Coast, Ronsdale Press, 2008.
  • Three Rivers: The Yukon's Great Boreal Wilderness Harbour Publishing, 2005.
  • Rendezvous With The Wild Houghton Mifflin, 2004.
  • The Eye In The Thicket (Natural History Essays) Thistledown Books 2002.
  • Mocambo Nights, ed. by Patrick Lane, Ekstasis Editions, 2001.
  • Lost Classics ed. by Ondaatje, Spalding, Redhill (Essays) Anchor Classics, 2001.
  • In The Clear (Fiction & Poetry) Thistledown Books, 1998.
  • What is Already Known (Fiction & Poetry) Thistledown Books, 1995.
  • How I Learned To Speak Dog (Poetry & Prose) Douglas & McIntyre.
  • Witness To Wilderness (Poetry & Prose), Arsenal Pulp Press, 1994.
  • Because You Loved Being A Stranger, (Poems) ed. by Susan Musgrave, Harbour Publishing, 1994.
  • Myths & Voices (Short Stories), White Pine Press, U.S.A.,1993.
  • The Last Map Is The Heart (Short Stories), Thistledown Books, 1989.
  • 15 Years In Exile, Exile, 1992.
  • Vancouver Poetry (Poetry), Polestar Press, 1986.
  • For Rexroth (Poetry), The Ark, 1980.
  • Western Windows (Poetry & Prose), Commcept Publishing Ltd., 1977.
  • A Government Job At Last (Poetry), MacLeod Books, 1977.
  • References

    Brian Brett Wikipedia