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Lorna Crozier was born in 1948 in Swift Current, Saskatchewan. As a child
growing up in a prairie community where the local heroes were hockey players
and curlers, she “never once thought of being a writer.” After
university, Lorna went on to teach high school English and work as a guidance
counsellor. During these years, Lorna published her first poem in Grain magazine,
a publication that turned her life toward writing. Her first collection Inside in the Sky was published in 1976. Since then, she has authored 14 books of
poetry, including The Garden Going on Without Us, Angels of Flesh,
Angels of Silence, Inventing the Hawk, winner of the 1992 Governor-General’s Award, Everything Arrives at the Light, Apocrypha of Light, What
the Living Won’t Let Go, and most recently Whetstone. Whether Lorna is writing
about angels, aging, or Louis Armstrong’s trout sandwich, she continues
to engage readers and writers across Canada and the world with her grace,
wisdom and wit. She is, as Margaret Laurence wrote, “a poet to be grateful
for.”
Since the beginning of her writing career, Lorna has been known for her
inspired teaching and mentoring of other poets. In 1980 Lorna was the writer-in-residence
at the Cypress Hills Community College in Swift Current; in 1983, at the Regina
Public Library; and in 1989 at the University of Toronto. She has held short-term
residencies at the Universities of Toronto and Lethbridge and at Douglas College.
Presently she lives near Victoria, where she teaches and serves as Chair in
the Writing Department at the University.
Beyond making poems, Lorna has also edited two non-fiction collections – Desire
in Seven Voices and Addiction: Notes from the Belly of the Beast. Together with her husband and fellow poet Patrick
Lane, she edited the 1994 landmark
collection Breathing Fire: Canada’s New Poets; in 2004, they co-edited
Breathing Fire 2, once again introducing over thirty new writers to the Canadian
literary world.
Her poems continue to be widely anthologized, appearing in 15 Canadian
Poets X 3, 20th Century Poetry and Poetics, Poetry International and most
recently in Open Field: An Anthology of Contemporary Canadian Poets, a collection
designed for American readers.
Her reputation as a generous and inspiring artist extends from her passion
for the craft of poetry to her teaching and through to her involvement in
various social causes. In addition to leading poetry workshops across the
globe, Lorna has given benefit readings for numerous organizations such as
the SPCA, the BC Land Conservancy, the Victoria READ Society, and PEERS, a
group committed to helping prostitutes get off the street. She has been a
frequent guest on CBC radio where she once worked as a reviewer and arts show
host. Wherever she reads she raises the profile and reputation of poetry.
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Click pictures to enlarge

Above: Canadian poet Lorna Crozier.
Above: Lorna's partner and fellow poet, Patrick Lane.
Above: Lorna's cats, doing what they do best.
Above: Lorna and Patrick Lane with their first grandchild.
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