Best known as a major Canadian painter, Emily Carr turned to writing in her last years, and issued four volumes of memoirs about her experiences as a landlady and as an artist.
Belfast-born Emily Elizabeth Shaw Beavan lived in New Brunswick from 1836 to 1844, an experience that gave rise to her book Sketches and Tales Illustrative of Life in the Backwoods of New Brunswick...
Emily McCausland Cummings was best known to her readers as "Mrs. Willoughby Cummings" when she became a professional journalist in Toronto after the death of her husband.
Well-known for her ground-breaking position as the first female judge in the British Empire, and for her work on behalf of women's participation in political life, Emily Murphy often wrote under...
English-born Emily Poynton Weaver immigrated to Canada as a child and became a career journalist primarily based in Toronto. Most of her books of non-fiction concern Canadian history, while her...
Born and raised in Ontario, Emily Spencer Kerby moved to Calgary in 1903, where she became active in many social concerns and was known as an advocate of women's suffrage.
A lifelong resident of various towns in Ontario, Emma Jeffers Graham published a light-hearted collectio of sketches about her experiences as a minister's wife.
Born in Manitoba and raised in Nova Scotia, Estelle Jean Worfolk spent much of her adult life in Montreal where she was active in the Canadian Authors Association and published one book of poetry.
Esther Marjorie Hill, the first woman to graduate with an architecture degree in Canada, published several articles, followed by a later book on glove-making.
Vancouver-based Ethel Wilson was British Columbia’s most prominent fiction writer during the 1950s and 1960s, and was honoured posthumously in 1985 with the establishment of the Ethel Wilson Prize...
Eva Rose York, the twin sister of Ida Fitch Baker (1858-1948), wrote fiction and non-fiction that reflected her strong religious commitment to the Salvation Army.
Nova Scotia writer Evelyn M. Richardson achieved sudden fame when her account of her family's unique experience as lighthouse-keepers, We Keep a Light (1945), won the Governor General's Award for...
Although she spent most of her adult life in the United States, prolific author Evelyn Eaton enjoyed an association with the Bay of Fundy, where she long maintained a summer home.