193:(Beach Holme Publishing, 2000), explores themes of home, and childhood. A long poem, "Preserving," which is included in this collection was also published in chapbook form by Rubicon Press (February 2011). "Preserving" uses found portions of text extracted from a home canning pamphlet as a springboard for poetic narrative that tells the multi-generational story of prairie women. As noted on the Rubicon Press website: "McGrath's grandmother gave her that brochure and it was a palimpsest of sorts, with notes on the recipes and unexpected doodles penciled in. Publications like that brochure, as well as cookbooks, seemed to be in the background of her grandmothers' and her mother's lives when she was growing up. But, when she encountered these texts as an adult, their meaning became quite different."
186:(University of Alberta Press 2002), McGrath's first novel, is an experimental work chronicling the history of a Canadian family. The plot structure of this novel is non-linear, with shifts in narrative viewpoint and time. The first line of the novel, "Johnny Cash played the harmonica imitating the sound of trains" hints at one of the novel's recurring motifs. The often poetic style of this novel is multi-layered with spaces in the text and on pages providing literal and figurative openings for the reader to enter the world of the narrator(s). Short fragments of the text are also repeated at the bottom of some of the pages.
25:
179:
launched at
Edmonton's SNAP Gallery in October, 2015. Natalie Olsen received an Honourable Mention Alcuin Society Award for Excellence in Book Design for her design work on the book, which incorporated image fragments from Jule's prints.
132:
McGrath collaborated with musician/producer Sascha
Liebrand on the album "Before We Knew" (Entity Records 2019)--a spoken word collection set to Liebrand's music/arrangements. McGrath released the EP
211:
68:
257:
237:
34:
156:, and voice. Quarto & Sound is currently working on an arrangement and adaptation of McGrath's long poem inspired by the
136:(spring 2017) with the group Quarto & Sound—made up of Edmonton musicians Sascha Liebrand, Yana Loo, and writer McGrath.
242:
121:(NeWest Press 2014) was nominated for the Georges Bugnet Prize for Fiction. The Santa Rosa Trilogy is set primarily in
252:
90:
106:
is a
Canadian poet and novelist. She was the inaugural winner of the $ 50,000 Prairie Grindstone Prize (2023-2024).
53:
247:
200:
and has appeared in numerous literary journals. Her non-fiction has been published locally and nationally.
117:(NeWest Press 2019) is the final novel in McGrath's Santa Rosa Trilogy. The second novel in the trilogy,
212:"Review: Wendy McGrath's Santa Rosa trilogy is done, and proves why she's a writer to pay attention to"
129:
the first book in the series, was nominated for the 2012 Robert
Kroetsch City of Edmonton Book Prize.
43:
157:
47:
39:
167:(NeWest Press 2015). The book is the culmination of a decade-long poetry/print collaboration with
232:
72:
8:
153:
64:
59:
Contentious material about living persons that is unsourced or poorly sourced
226:
168:
149:
140:
is an adaptation of McGrath's eponymous "mirror poem"—a collaboration of
197:
171:
Walter Jule, who also contributed cover art for McGrath's first book
122:
141:
145:
196:McGrath's fiction and poetry has been broadcast on
224:
52:but its sources remain unclear because it lacks
163:McGrath's most recent poetry collection is
91:Learn how and when to remove this message
209:
225:
18:
258:21st-century Canadian women writers
13:
14:
269:
210:Colbert, Jade (2 October 2019).
23:
238:21st-century Canadian novelists
175:(Beach Holme Publishing 2000).
1:
63:, especially if potentially
35:biography of a living person
7:
243:21st-century Canadian poets
61:must be removed immediately
10:
274:
203:
189:Her first book of poetry,
16:Canadian poet and novelist
109:
253:Canadian women novelists
158:North Saskatchewan River
67:or harmful. Please help
75:more precise citations.
191:common place ecstasies
173:common place ecstasies
177:A Revision of Forward
165:A Revision of Forward
248:Canadian women poets
216:The Globe and Mail
184:Recurring Fictions
154:experimental music
40:list of references
123:Edmonton, Alberta
101:
100:
93:
265:
219:
96:
89:
85:
82:
76:
71:this article by
54:inline citations
27:
26:
19:
273:
272:
268:
267:
266:
264:
263:
262:
223:
222:
206:
152:, instrumental
112:
97:
86:
80:
77:
58:
44:related reading
28:
24:
17:
12:
11:
5:
271:
261:
260:
255:
250:
245:
240:
235:
221:
220:
205:
202:
111:
108:
99:
98:
48:external links
31:
29:
22:
15:
9:
6:
4:
3:
2:
270:
259:
256:
254:
251:
249:
246:
244:
241:
239:
236:
234:
233:Living people
231:
230:
228:
217:
213:
208:
207:
201:
199:
194:
192:
187:
185:
181:
178:
174:
170:
166:
161:
159:
155:
151:
147:
143:
139:
135:
130:
128:
125:circa 1960s.
124:
120:
116:
107:
105:
104:Wendy McGrath
95:
92:
84:
74:
70:
66:
62:
56:
55:
49:
45:
41:
37:
36:
30:
21:
20:
215:
195:
190:
188:
183:
182:
176:
172:
164:
162:
137:
133:
131:
126:
118:
114:
113:
103:
102:
87:
78:
60:
51:
33:
150:spoken word
127:Santa Rosa,
73:introducing
38:includes a
227:Categories
169:printmaker
119:North East
115:Broke City
81:April 2009
198:CBC Radio
65:libelous
204:Sources
69:improve
142:poetry
110:Career
46:, or
32:This
146:jazz
138:BOX
134:BOX
229::
214:.
160:.
148:,
144:,
50:,
42:,
218:.
94:)
88:(
83:)
79:(
57:.
Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License. Additional terms may apply.