Under the pen name of "Katherine Hale," Amelia Beers Warnock Garvin was well known as a journalist, writer, and active member of the Toronto literary community.
Born into a network of distinguished Nova Scotia families, Amelia Johnston Weatherbe was known as a local poet long before she issued her only volume, Songs of the Valley and Other Verses, in 1921.
Lady Amelia Matilda Murray visited Canada in 1854 and included her observations about the country in her subsequently published book of travel letters.
Gertrude Bernard, of Mohawk and Algonquin ancestry, was publicly known as "Anahareo," the name given to her by her partner Archie Belaney, better known as the faux-Native "Grey Owl." After Grey Owl...
Angéline Hango published just one book, Truthfully Yours (1948), a light-hearted account of French-Canadian family life that won the Oxford-Crowell Competition of 1947 and the Stephen Leacock Award...
At the age of thirteen, Ann Bruyères wrote a poem in commemoration of the fallen General Brock during the War of 1812. Very little information is known about this author; this poem is her only...
Anna Leonowens settled in Halifax NS, after working as governess to the many children of the king of Siam, and recording her experiences in her memoirs.
Anna May Wilson, who sometimes used the pseudonym "Anison North", was an Ontario-based teacher and journalist who published four well-received historical novels.
Anna Theresa Sadlier, a daughter of Mary Anne Sadlier (1820-1903), followed in her mother's footsteps as a prolific author of Catholic fiction and non-fiction.
A lifetime resident of Charlottetown, Prince Edward Island, Anne Alley published poems in the Charlottetown Patriot and issued one volume, Leaflets of Verse (1925).
Anne Langton emigrated to Upper Canada with her brother's family in 1837. She recorded her experiences in letters and journals that circulated widely in manuscript before being published posthumously.
BC Poet Anne Marriot lept to public acclaim with her first chapbook, The Wind Our Enemy (1939), and continued to write poetry throughout the rest of her life.
The course of Anne Murray Powell's eventful life, from milliner's apprentice to judge's wife, is recorded in her copious letters that were published long after her death.
In 1870-71, Annie Butler accompanied her mariner husband on a 13-month voyage from Nova Scotia to South America, recording her experiences in a diary that was later published.
After immigrating from England, Annie Fowler Rothwell Christie lived in or near Kingston, ON, and contributed poems and serialized novels to many different periodicals.
Annie Garland Foster spent much of her adult life in British Columbia, where she was variously a nurse, teacher, politician, and journalist. In 1931, she published the first extended study of...
Musician Annie Glen Broder made numerous contributions to the cultural life of Calgary, AB, where she was active as a journalist and published one volume of poetry.