Description
Marty Gervais is one of Canada's most distinguished poets and respected journalists. Throughout his career as a book editor of The Windsor Star, he has won more than a dozen newspaper awards. As a poet, he has won the Harbourfront Festival Prize and the Milton Acorn People's Poetry Award. Gervais published nine previous books of poetry, and has read his work throughout Canada and the United States. He also teaches creative writing at the University of Windsor.
About the authors
Marty Gervais was appointed Windsor's first Poet Laureate in 2011. Gervais has written more than a dozen books of poetry, as well as two plays and a novel. He is an award—winning journalist, poet, photographer and editor. In 1998, he won Toronto's prestigious Harbourfront Festival Prize for his contributions to Canadian letters and to emerging writers. He has won more than two dozen journalism awards for his work with the Windsor Star where he was best known for his "My Town" column. As a poet, Gervais was awarded the Milton Acorn People's Poetry Award in 1996 for his book Tearing Into A Summer Day. That same book was also awarded the City of Windsor Mayor's Award for literature. Gervais won the same award again in 2003 for To Be Now: Selected Poems. He received the Queen's Jubilee Medal in 2012.
Nicola Vulpe considers poetry an unfortunate habit, but has nonetheless published three collections of poetry, When the Mongols Return, Insult to the Brain and Blue Tile, a novella, The Extraordinary Event of Pia H., an anthology of Canadian poetry about the Spanish Civil War, and essays on subjects as diverse as the Epic of Gilgamesh, and the afterlife of Norman Bethune.
Other titles by
The Sky Above
Selected Poems
The Hands
Walk in the Woods
Portrait of the Ojibway Prairie Complex
Five Days Walking Five Towns
Touring Windsor's Past
Touch the Darkness
People of Faith
The Story of Hôtel-Dieu Grace Hospital 1888 to 2013
Ghost Road
and Other Forgotten Stories of Windsor
Rumrunners, The
A Prohibition Scrapbook
My Town
Faces of Windsor
Afternoons with the Devil
Growing up Catholic