She has published 12 collections of poetry and a collection of essays on poetry and science. Her work has received multiple awards, most recently an honorary doctorate from the University of Alberta.[2]
Biography
Major emigrated from Scotland at the age of eight, and grew up in Toronto, Ontario before working as a weekly newspaper reporter in central British Columbia. She has lived in Edmonton, Alberta since 1981. She has a BA (English, history) from Trinity College, Toronto at the University of Toronto.[3] Her first book was a prize-winning YA fantasy novel. Since then she has published 12 books of poetry and an essay collection on poetry and science.
She is past-president of both the Writers' Guild of Alberta and the League of Canadian Poets,[4][5] as well as former chair of the Edmonton Arts Council.[6] In 2005, she was appointed to a two-year term as the first poet laureate for the City of Edmonton, and then went on to receive the Lieutenant Governor of Alberta Distinguished Artist Award in 2017.[7] During her tenure as poet laureate, she founded the Edmonton Poetry Festival in 2006.[8] In November 2019 she received an honorary doctorate of letters from the University of Alberta.
Awards (selected)
2017 Lieutenant Governor of Alberta Distinguished Artist Award.[9]
2016 Robert Kroetsch Award for Poetry, for Standard Candles.[10]
2012 National Magazine Award Gold Medal (essay category) for “The Ultraviolet Catastrophe.”[11]
Raymond Souster Award, for Welcome to the Anthropocene (2019), and Standard Candles (2016).
City of Edmonton Book Prize, for Welcome to the Anthropocene (2019), The Office Tower Tales (2009), Tales for an Urban Sky (2000), and Lattice of the Years (1999).[16]
Scansion and Science – The Anne Szumigalski Memorial Lecture, Toronto, 2017.[17]
A superposition of brains – Provost’s Lecture at Stony Brook University of New York (cosponsored by the Humanities Institute at Stony Brook and the C.K. Yang Institute for Theoretical Physics).[18]
Numbers with Personality: Ordinal Linguistic Personification – presentation to plenary session, Bridges Conference on Mathematics, Music, Art, Architecture, Education, Culture (University of Waterloo, 2017).[19]
Convocation address – University of Alberta honorary degree presentation, 2019.[20]
Perhaps the Plaintive Numbers Flow – presented at Bridges Conference on Mathematics, Music, Art, Architecture, Culture (Online, 2020).[21]
Anthologies (selected)
Going it Alone: Plays by Women for Solo Performance. (Nuage Editions, 1997) ISBN978-0-921833-52-9
Threshold: An Anthology of Contemporary Writing from Alberta. (University of Alberta Press. 1999.) ISBN978-0-88864-338-4
Poetry and Spiritual Practice: Selections from Contemporary Canadian Poets (St. Thomas Press, 2002) ISBN978-0-9685339-7-0
Reading the River: A traveller’s companion to the North Saskatchewan River (Regina, Coteau Books) ISBN978-1550503173
How the Light Gets In: An Anthology of Contemporary Poetry from Canada (Waterford, Ireland, School of Humanities at Waterford Institute of Technology, 2009) ISBN978-0954028183
Locations of Grief: An Emotional Geography (Wolsak & Wynn, 2020) ISBN978-1-989496-14-5
Waiting: An Anthology of Essays (University of Alberta Press, 2018) ISBN978-1-77212-383-8
Further reading
Perkins, Don. "Metaphors, myths, and the eye of the magpie".[22]
^"Bridges 2020". The Bridges Archive. Retrieved 26 April 2023.
^Don Perkins (2016). Carriere, Marie; Purcell, Jason (eds.). Ten Canadian Writers in Context. University of Alberta Press. pp. 122–138.
^Melnyk, Neil; Neil Querengesser (2017). Melnyk, George; Coates, Donna (eds.). Writing Alberta: Alberta Building on a Literary Identity. University of Calgary Press. pp. 117–134. ISBN978-1-55238-891-4.