Sandra Louise Birdsell, CM (née Bartlette) (born 22 April 1942)[1] is a Canadian novelist and short story writer of Métis and Mennonite heritage from Morris, Manitoba.

Sandra Louise Birdsell
Born (1942-04-22) April 22, 1942 (age 82)
Hamiota, Manitoba, Canada
OccupationWriter
Notable worksThe Russländer, Waiting for Joe
Children3
Website
sandrabirdsell.com

Life and career

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Born in Hamiota, Manitoba, Birdsell was the fifth of eleven children. She lived most of her early life in Morris, Manitoba, where the family moved after her father joined the army in 1943. Her father was a French-speaking Cree Métis born in Canada and her mother was a Low-German speaking Mennonite who was born in Russia.[2] When Birdsell was six and a half, her sister died from leukemia, which left a four-year gap between her and her next older sister. Her loneliness led her to ponder by herself to the nearby parks and rivers allowing her imagination to go wild.[3]

Her hometown of Morris experienced a major flood in 1950. Her first three stories in Night Travellers are based on that flood. Birdsell left home at the age of fifteen, where she studied at the University of Winnipeg and the University of Manitoba, where she studied under Robert Kroetsch. In 1996, she moved to Regina, Saskatchewan, and currently resides in Ottawa, Ontario.

At the age of thirty-five, she enrolled in Creative Writing at the University of Winnipeg. Five years later, Turnstone Press published her first book, Night Travellers.

In January 2007, Birdsell began a four-month term as the Carol Shields writer in residence at the University of Winnipeg.[4] In 2010, Birdsell was appointed a Member of the Order of Canada and in 2012 she was invested with Saskatchewan Order of Merit (SOM).[5]

She is a mother to three children and a grandmother to four children.

Publications

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Short stories

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Night Travellers

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Birdsell's first book, a collections of interconnected short stories, Night Travellers(1982), is set in the imaginary Manitoba town of Agassiz, and concerns the large Lafreniere family: the teenaged sisters Betty, Lureen and Truda, their Mennonite mother Mika and their Métis father Maurice and the girls’ maternal grandparents, Oma and Opa Thiessen. Agassiz is based on the flood-prone town of Morris, on the banks of the Red River. where Birdsell spent her childhood.[6] The source for the name Agassiz is Lake Agassiz, an enormous glacial lake that around 13,000 years ago covered much of what are now Manitoba, northwestern Ontario, northern Minnesota, eastern North Dakota, and Saskatchewan.[7] Lake Agassiz is a controlling metaphor for the stories ... representing memory and ancestry". While the devastating flood that happened in Morris in 1950 "is a related image that reverberates throughout the text".[8]

1984 Night Travellers received the Gerald Lampert Award from League of Canadian Poets. Usually this its awarded for a first book of poetry.

Ladies of the House

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Birdsell's second collection, from 1984, is a sequel collection to Night Travellers that the focuses on the Laftenierre family women from Agassiz and their women friends, though most of the stories ae set in Winnipeg. In 1987 it was republished with Night Travellers, in one volume called Agassiz Stories. An American edition, titled Agassiz: A Novel in Stories, appeared in 1991 (Minneapolis: Milkweed).

Children's literature

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The Town That Floated Away (1997) was influenced by Birdsell's experience as a child of the 1950 flood in Morris, and narrates the adventures of young Virginia Potts after she is left behind when her town floats away. Birdsell also wrote A Prairie Boy’s Winter, a one act play for children, which was co-written and produced by Prairie Theatre Exchange, in 1986.

Novels

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The Missing Child

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Birdsell's first novel, published in 1989, is "an evocative magic realist portrait of the fictional town of Agassiz", which won the W.H. Smith/Books in Canada First Novel Award.[9]

Chrome Suite

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Birdsell's second novel was published in 1992, and covers four decades of script-writer Amy Barber's life: from an extraordinarily hot summer in a small Manitoba town in 1950; "to the 1960s and the 1970s, when Amy marries, goes to live in the city, and begins to have reason to fear for her young son"; to the present, with Amy traveling from Toronto to Winnipeg with her young Polish, film-maker lover.[10]

The Russländer

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Published in 2001, this is Birdsell's third novel, and it explores Birdsell's own family history. The word Russländer means "Russians" in German and her mother and maternal grandparents were Mennonite emigrants from Russia. It was published as Katya in the US.

It is the story of Katherine (Katya) Vogt, and her Mennonite family's life in Russia from the end of 1910,[11] until she, her husband, two sisters, and grandparents emigrated to Canada in 1923. Katya was born in 1902.[12]

The story begins with the family living on the prosperous Mennonite estate of Abram Suddermann in Ukraine, where Katya's father is the overseer. They are under the protection of the Tsar whose wife is German. This is part of the Chortitza Colony, land granted to German-speaking Mennonites for colonization. Chortitza was founded in 1789 by Plautdietsch-speaking Mennonite settlers from West Prussia, and consisted of many villages. It was the first of many Mennonite settlements in the Russian Empire.

Life then becomes much harder when World War I begins and there is suspicion as to the loyalty of the Mennonites because they speak German. Life then eases when where the area is occupied by Austrian and German soldiers. However, Russia falls into chaos when they leave in 1917, with the February and October Revolutions. The Russian workers on the estate take the bloody revenge on the Mennonites. Katya's parents and her siblings, but for two sisters are brutally murdered. After years of poverty and near-starvation. Katya, her husband, sisters, and grandparents eventually emigrate to Canada in 1923, to settle in Manitoba: "Between 1923 and 1930, nearly 25,000 Mennonites fled violence that erupted in the Soviet Union".[13]

Recognition

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Prizes and honours

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Awards

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  • Marion Engel Award for meritorious achievements of a woman writer in mid-career.[16]
  • The Joseph S. Stauffer Prize, The Canadian Council 1992, for meritorious achievements in the arts.[17]
  • Juno Award nomination for radio play, The Town that Floated Away.[16]
  • National Magazine Award and nomination for short fiction.[16]
  • 45 Below Award, by The Canadian Book Information Center. Chosen as one of ten most promising below the age of 45.[16]
  • Awarded writing grant from The Manitoba Arts Council, The Canadian Council and the Saskatchewan Arts Board.[16]
  • Nominee for 2010 Saskatchewan Book Award Shortlists: Fiction Award. Waiting for Joe (Random House Canada).[18]

Bibliography

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Novels

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Childrens

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  • The Town that Floated Away (illustrations by Helen Flook) (1997). HarperCollins. See 1992 radio play below.

Short stories

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  • Night Travellers. Turnstone Press, 1982
  • Ladies of the House. Turnstone Press, 1984
  • Agassiz Stories (combined the two earlier collections); republished in the US, as Agassiz: A Novel in Stories. Minneapolis: Milkweed, 1991.
    • Agassiz. Traduit de l'anglais par Maryse Trudeau. Montréal : Du Roseau, 1990.
  • The Two-Headed Calf. McClelland & Stewart, 1997

Scripts

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Birdsell has also written for television, theatre and radio.[15][19]

  • The Waiting Time. 60 minute radio drama commissioned by CBC produced in Mar. 1993.
  • Another View of North. 60 minute radio drama commissioned by CBC and produced in Jun. 1992.
  • The Town That Floated Away. 30 minute radio drama produced by Barbara Nicol, CBC, Sept. 1992. Released on CD and cassette, BMG records
  • Niagara Falls. A 45-minute film script as part of a trilogy, In Good Season. Produced in a 30-minute format for the CBC The Way We Are. series. West End Productions Inc.
  • Summer Storm. Novina Motion Pictures. 30 minute film script produced for a CBC Family Pictures series.
  • Falling In Love. 30 minute film script as part of a trilogy, In Good Season. West End Productions Inc.
  • Places Not Our Own. 60 minute drama for the mini series, Daughters of the Country. National Film Board.

Theatre

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  • A Prairie Boy’s Winter. A one act play for children. Co-written and produced by Prairie Theatre Exchange, 1986.
  • The Revival. A Two Act Play. Commissioned by Prairie Theatre Exchange and produced in 1987.

Archives

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There is Sandra Birdsell archives at Library and Archives Canada.

References

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  1. ^ Boyd, Colin; Grandy, Karen; Skelly, Julia (2018-12-04). "Sandra Birdsell". The Canadian Encyclopedia. Retrieved 2023-05-21.
  2. ^ Ripley, Gordon (1997). Who's who in Canadian Literature. Teeswater: Reference Press.
  3. ^ Lecker, Robert, Jack David and Ellen Quigley, eds. Canadian Writers and their Works: Fiction Series. Vol 12. Toronto: ECW Press, 1995. Print.
  4. ^ "Archived copy" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2016-03-03. Retrieved 2022-02-17.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  5. ^ General, The Office of the Secretary to the Governor (20 September 2017). "The Governor General of Canada".
  6. ^ Heath, J., "Sandra Birdsell'.Profiles in Canadian Literature 8. Toronto: Dundurn Press, 1991. ISBN 9781550021462
  7. ^ Fisher, Timothy G.; Smith, Derald G.; Andrews, John T. (2002). "Preboreal oscillation caused by a glacial Lake Agassiz flood" (PDF). Quaternary Science Reviews. 21 (2002): 873–78. Bibcode:2002QSRv...21..873F. doi:10.1016/S0277-3791(01)00148-2. Archived from the original (PDF) on 22 February 2014. Retrieved 7 April 2018., at page 874.
  8. ^ Heath, J., "Sandra Birdsell".
  9. ^ Cory Toth - Encyclopedia Of Saskatchewan. "The Encyclopedia of Saskatchewan | Details". esask.uregina.ca. Retrieved 2023-01-09.
  10. ^ "The Chrome Suite « Sandra Birdsell". sandrabirdsell.com. Retrieved 2023-01-09.
  11. ^ Leo Tolstoy's death is mention on page 14: he died November, 1910.
  12. ^ Aged 8, page 7.
  13. ^ Ross, Jordan (2 June 2019). "Jun 2019: MHV exhibit delves into Russländer migration". Winnipeg Free Press.
  14. ^ "Emma Donoghue, Kathleen Winter make GG short list" Archived 2010-10-20 at the Wayback Machine. The Globe and Mail, October 13, 2010.
  15. ^ a b "About Sandra « Sandra Birdsell". sandrabirdsell.com. Retrieved 2023-01-09.
  16. ^ a b c d e "Sandra Birdsell".
  17. ^ "Sandra Birdsell".
  18. ^ "2010 Saskatchewan Book Awards shortlists". Archived from the original on 2010-10-23. Retrieved 2010-11-05.
  19. ^ Dave Gaertner (2004-01-22). "University of Manitoba" (PDF). Retrieved 2023-01-09.
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