Biography
Marilyn Bowering was born in Winnipeg, Canada and moved with her
family to Victoria, B.C. as a child. Her first writing was as a
poet after study with Robin Skelton and important friendships with
the poets Dorothy Livesay and PK Page. Her first book, set in Newfoundland
— to which her father’s family had emigrated in the
early 19th century — combined lyric poems, prose and photographs.
She then turned her interest to the British Columbia coastal landscape
and mythology in which she had grown up.
During this period she published several volumes of poetry, including
One Who Became Lost and The
Killing Room, a book of short prose, The
Visitors Have All Returned and co-edited the seminal anthology
of Native Canadian Indian poetry, Many Voices.
Subsequently she began the first of a number of extended periods
in Europe, spending a year in Greece and several years in Scotland.
Out of this period came the books, Sleeping with
Lambs, several pamphlets with Martin Booth’s Sceptre
Press, and Giving Back Diamonds.
In the mid 1980s, after publishing a volume of her selected poetry
(The Sunday Before Winter — nominated
for a Governor General’s Award), she turned from lyric poetry
to narrative work, writing on the First World War (Grandfather
Was A Soldier), Marilyn Monroe (Anyone Can
See I Love You), the space dog, Laika (Calling
all the World) and George Sand (A Cold Departure).
Each of these works was dramatized for either BBC or CBC radio and
some were also performed on stage, garnering a number of significant
nominations, including for the Prix Italia and the Sony Prize. In
collaboration with the Canadian director, Elizabeth Gorrie, who
also produced Marilyn Bowering’s play, Temple
of the Stars (1996), and the Japanese director, Yuko Sekyia,
she wrote narrative, poems and songs for Hajimari-No-Hajimari
four myths of the Pacific Rim, which toured throughout North America
and Japan.
Marilyn Bowering’s first major novel was To
All Appearances A Lady, which was published in Canada,
the United Kingdom and the United States where it was a 1990 New
York Times Notable Book selection. The novel tells the story of
two women who immigrate to Vancouver Island in the late 19th century
from Hong Kong. At its core is the tale of the lepers of D’Arcy
Island, an imaginative re-construction of the lives of the Chinese
lepers who were abandoned there during this period. It continues
to be a popular choice for schools and Book Clubs (see the Online
Reader’s Guide). It has also served as a text in the studies
of History and International Relations in Universities in Canada
and the Middle-East.
In 2003, the English Composer, Gavin Bryars, set a section of To
All Appearances A Lady as
a song.
Returning to poetry after several years of living in Seville, Spain,
Marilyn published Love As It Is and Autobiography.
Autobiography brought her a second nomination
for the Governor General’s award plus the Pat Lowther Memorial
Award. Cover art for these books and for the subsequent, Human
Bodies: New and Selected Poems, 1987-1999 and The
Alchemy of Happiness in 2003 was by the Spanish painter,
Mercedes Carbonell. A catalogue of a 2004 exhibition, in Spain,
of Carbonell's drawings and Marilyn Bowering's poems was published
by the Fundacion Aparejadores de Sevilla. The cover art for Green,
Bowering's 2007 book of poetry, is by PK Page.
Marilyn Bowering’s work with the animateur, Ishu Patel, for
the National Film Board on Divine Fate resulted
in awards from the Earth Peace International Film Festival and from
the International Animation Festival.
In 1997 Visible Worlds,
Bowering’s second novel was published in Canada. This work
was also published in the United Kingdom, the United States, and
in translation in Germany, Finland and Greece. It received the Ethel
Wilson Fiction Prize and was short-listed for the prestigious Orange
Prize. Marilyn Bowering’s evocation of a woman’s crossing
of the Arctic ice cap and the tracing of the lives of three families
against the backdrop of the Depression, Second World War, Korean
War and the Cold War have attracted considerable attention, including
that of researchers into the history of biological warfare.
Early 2004 saw the publication of Marilyn Bowering’s third
novel, Cat’s
Pilgrimage. A story that crosses the boundaries of literary
and genre fiction, Cat’s Pilgrimage
is a bold portrayal of a young woman’s journey from the all
too commonplace violent world of her peers to the timeless world
stage of the Glastonbury Zodiac. An undying love-story, told by
the cat, Cutthroat, weaves its rich thread through a tapestry of
history and event from the Iron Age to Bay Watch.
2006 brought Bowering's fourth novel, What
it Takes to be Human, a story of the human capacity to
survive and grow in a world where human qualities are increasingly
under threat.
Marilyn Bowering is married and has one daughter. She lives in
British Columbia, Canada.

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