
Susan
Musgrave
Susan Musgrave was born in 1951 in Santa Cruz, California, and raised on Vancouver Island. A protégée of Robin Skelton, she published a number of poems in The Malahat Review when she was only 16. Her first poetry collection, Songs of the Sea-Witch, was published in 1970, when she was 18. She is the author of almost 30 books of poetry, fiction, nonfiction, and children’s literature. She is a three-time nominee for the Governor General’s Literary Awards: for fiction with her first novel, The Charcoal Burners; and twice for poetry with her collections A Man to Marry, A Man to Bury and Origami Dove. Musgrave recently won the B.C. Civil Liberties Association Liberty Award for art and the Spirit Bear Award, which honours writers who make a significant contribution to the poetry of the Pacific Northwest. She teaches at the University of British Columbia in the Optional Residency Creative Writing MFA program and conducts workshops in libraries, prisons, high schools, and psychiatric wards across the country. Musgrave lives on Haida Gwaii.
