Elspeth Cameron is the author of three award-winning biographies:
Hugh MacLennan: A Writer''s Life (1981), Irving Layton: A Portrait
(1985), and Earle Birney: A Life (1994). Her 1997 memoir No
Previous Experience won the W.O. Mitchell Literary Prize. She was
the recipient of the UBC Medal for Canadian Biography in 1981 and
the City of Vancouver Book Award in 1995. Her biography of Hugh
MacLennan was a finalist for the Governor General''s Literary
Award. She has written numerous profiles of Canadian cultural
figures such as Peter Newman, Jack McClelland, Veronica Tennant,
Anne Murray, Howard Engel, Janette Turner Hospital, and Timothy
Findley, winning several journalism awards. Her work has appeared
in Saturday Night, Chatelaine, Maclean''s, Leisureways, and in a
number of academic journals. In addition, she has edited seven
books, including Great Dames, a collection of biographical
sketches, memoirs, and essays about twentieth-century Canadian
women from all walks of life. She has taught English and Canadian
Studies at Concordia University and the University of Toronto, and
is currently an adjunct professor in the English Language and
Literature Department at Brock University. Elspeth now lives in St.
Catharines, Ontario, and is at work on a biography of Group of
Seven member, A.Y. Jackson.
Elspeth Cameron is the author of three award-winning
biographies: Hugh MacLennan: A Writer''s Life (1981), Irving
Layton: A Portrait (1985), and Earle Birney: A Life (1994). Her
1997 memoir No Previous Experience won the W.O. Mitchell Literary
Prize. She was the recipient of the UBC Medal for Canadian
Biography in 1981 and the City of Vancouver Book Award in 1995. Her
biography of Hugh MacLennan was a finalist for the Governor
General''s Literary Award. She has written numerous profiles of
Canadian cultural figures such as Peter Newman, Jack McClelland,
Veronica Tennant, Anne Murray, Howard Engel, Janette Turner
Hospital, and Timothy Findley, winning several journalism awards.
Her work has appeared in Saturday Night, Chatelaine, Maclean''s,
Leisureways, and in a number of academic journals. In addition, she
has edited seven books, including Great Dames, a collection of
biographical sketches, memoirs, and essays about twentieth-century
Canadian women from all walks of life. She has taught English and
Canadian Studies at Concordia University and the University of
Toronto, and is currently an adjunct professor in the English
Language and Literature Department at Brock University. Elspeth now
lives in St. Catharines, Ontario, and is at work on a biography of
Group of Seven member, A.Y. Jackson.