Anne Michaels (born 15 April 1958) is a Canadian poet and novelist whose work has been translated and published in over 45 countries. Her books have garnered dozens of international awards including the
Orange Prize, the
Guardian Fiction Prize, the
Lannan Award for Fiction and the Commonwealth Poetry Prize for the Americas. She is the recipient of honorary degrees, the Guggenheim Fellowship and many other honours. She has been shortlisted for the
Governor General's Award
The Governor General's Awards are a collection of annual awards presented by the governor general of Canada, recognizing distinction in numerous academic, artistic, and social fields.
The first award was conceived and inaugurated in 1937 by the ...
, the
Griffin Poetry Prize, twice shortlisted for the
Giller Prize and twice long-listed for the
International Dublin Literary Award. Michaels won a 2019
Vine Award for ''Infinite Gradation'', her first volume of non-fiction. Michaels was the
poet laureate of
Toronto, Ontario
Toronto ( , locally pronounced or ) is the List of the largest municipalities in Canada by population, most populous city in Canada. It is the capital city of the Provinces and territories of Canada, Canadian province of Ontario. With a p ...
, Canada from 2016 to 2019, and she is perhaps best known for her novel ''
Fugitive Pieces'', which was adapted for the screen in 2007. Michaels won the 2024 Giller Prize for her novel ''
Held.''
Early life
Anne Michaels was born in
Toronto
Toronto ( , locally pronounced or ) is the List of the largest municipalities in Canada by population, most populous city in Canada. It is the capital city of the Provinces and territories of Canada, Canadian province of Ontario. With a p ...
, Ontario, in 1958. She attended
Vaughan Road Academy and then later the
University of Toronto
The University of Toronto (UToronto or U of T) is a public university, public research university whose main campus is located on the grounds that surround Queen's Park (Toronto), Queen's Park in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. It was founded by ...
, where she is an adjunct faculty member in the Department of English.
Career
With her first two poetry collections, ''The Weight of Oranges'' and ''Miner's Pond'', Michaels gained attention as a writer who balances technical precision with profound meditation and humanity. The recipient of the
Commonwealth Poetry Prize for the Americas and the Canadian Authors' Association Award, and a finalist for both the Governor General's Award and the Trillium Award, Michaels secured her place among the finest Canadian poets early in her career.
Following her early success with poetry, Michaels found herself "bumping up more frequently against its limits.
hewas pushing the form as far as
hecould in longer pieces, trying to make connections on a larger scale.
hestretched poetry as far as it would go in terms of length." Her debut novel, ''
Fugitive Pieces'' (1996), offered Michaels the opportunity to work more expansively with complicated questions related to history, identity, location, and grief: "a way of layering things; of having images and gestures that connect between page 100 and page 303. It
ave herthe chance to bring readers in slowly, via as many strands as
he could"
With ''Fugitive Pieces'', Michaels lays the thematic foundation of her future works, exploring the relationship between history and memory, and how we, as a people, remember. She also launches her meditation on "what love makes us capable of, and incapable of," and the paradoxical understanding that "there is nothing a man will not do to another; nothing a man will not do for another." Confronting the horrors of war, violence, dislocation, and loss through her writing, Michaels "travels with the reader through terrain that is philosophically, morally and emotionally perilous" and refuses to publish unless she can "in some way deliver the reader and
erselfto the other side." She writes: "We don't need repeated proof of violence or horror - a single incident convinces us - but we do need proof, again and again, of the strength, the power, the reach, and the consequences of love."
''Fugitive Pieces,'' the story of a holocaust survivor trying to find his way back into the world, went on to be critically acclaimed internationally, winning the Orange Prize for Fiction, the Guardian Fiction Prize, the Lannan Literary Award for Fiction, the Trillium Book Award, the Books in Canada First Novel Award, the City of Toronto Book Award, the Heritage Toronto Award of Merit, the Martin and Beatrice Fischer Award, the Harold Ribalow Award, the Giuseppe Acerbi Literary Award and the Jewish Quarterly-Wingate Prize.
While working on her second novel, ''
The Winter Vault'', Michaels released ''
Skin Divers'', her third poetry collection and the last of three volumes, beginning with ''The Weight of Oranges'' and ''Miner's Pond.'' All three were intended to speak to one another, and were later published in ''Poems'' (2000)''.'' Notable for her poetic style, both in her poetry and prose, Michaels writes that "
oetry issuch a good discipline for a novelist: it makes you aware that even if you have four or five hundred pages to play with, you mustn't waste a single word."
During this period, Michaels also began writing for the stage. A collaboration with
John Berger
John Peter Berger ( ; 5 November 1926 – 2 January 2017) was an English art critic, novelist, painter and poet. His novel '' G.'' won the 1972 Booker Prize, and his essay on art criticism '' Ways of Seeing'', written as an accompaniment to t ...
led to the development of ''Vanishing Points'' (2005), a profound meditation on railways, love and loss, directed by Simon McBurney, produced by
Complicite and presented in the historic
German Gymnasium in King's Cross. This work was later published as ''Railtracks'' (2011). She also contributed the libretto to Canadian composer Omar Daniel's ''The Passion of Lavinia Andronicus'' (2005), offering a new dimension to the tragic figure at the centre of one of Shakespeare's most harrowing plays in a performance by the Hilliard Ensemble and Tafelmusik Chamber Choir.
Michaels would not publish ''The Winter Vault'' until 2009, thirteen years following the release of ''Fugitive Pieces'' which, likewise, took nearly a decade to write. Like ''Fugitive Pieces,'' her second novel considers deeply the "complicated relationship between huge historic events and intimate, domestic events; the relationship between historical grief and personal grief; how we remember privately, and how we remember - and memorialize – publicly, collectively. Each community, each nation, faces this question and answers it in its own way, according to its own needs."
Connecting three historic events - the dismantling and reconstruction of Egypt's Abu Simbel Temple; the building of the St. Lawrence Seaway in Canada and the drowning of towns, villages and graves; and the rebuilding of Warsaw after World War II - the novel considers whether a temple, taken apart stone by stone and rebuilt, is the same temple; a river barraged, the same river; a city reconstructed, the same city; and whether the heart can be repaired and rebuilt after a profound personal loss. ''The Winter Vault'' went on to garner international praise and was a finalist for the Scotiabank Giller Prize, the Trillium Book Award and the Commonwealth Prize, and was also long-listed for the International Dublin Literary Award.
In 2011, Michaels contributed to the
Bush Theatre's 24-hour performance of ''
Sixty-Six Books'' to mark the 400th anniversary of the
King James Bible
The King James Version (KJV), also the King James Bible (KJB) and the Authorized Version (AV), is an Early Modern English translation of the Christian Bible for the Church of England, which was commissioned in 1604 and published in 1611, by ...
, providing 66 playwrights, poets, songwriters, and novelists - of all faiths and none, from over a dozen countries and across five continents - the opportunity to respond to some of the oldest stories ever told. Her contribution, "The Crossing," was later anthologized in ''Sixty-Six Books: 21st Century Writers Speak to the King James Bible'' (2011)''.'' An extract from "The Crossing" was also performed at
Westminster Abbey's King James Bible Service for Her Majesty
The Queen, His Royal Highness
The Duke of Edinburgh and His Royal Highness
The Prince of Wales.
Michaels returned to poetry with the release of her book-length poem, ''Correspondences'' (2013), an historic and personal elegy in an accordion-style format that can be read frontwards or backwards. A collaboration with artist Bernice Eisenstein, ''Correspondences'' alternates poetry with haunting portraits of the 20th century writers and thinkers to whom Michaels' pays tribute. The work went on to receive the Helen and Stan Vine Book Award and was shortlisted for the Griffin Poetry Prize.
In October 2015, Michaels began her tenure as the
poet laureate of Toronto, succeeding
George Elliott Clarke. Her personal mandate is to provide a platform for Toronto's many tongues: "How do we make a space for all these literatures that have come to us in such tremendous largesse, such tremendous richness? We need Torontonians to bring their cultures, bring their poets to us, so we have access to that huge international library." 2015 also saw the release of Michaels' first children's book, ''The Adventures of Miss Petitfour'', with its follow-up, ''The Further Adventures of Miss Petitfour'', being released in 2022.
In 2017, a new collection of poetry, ''All We Saw,'' and a new work of non-fiction, ''Infinite Gradation'' (with afterword by poet Gareth Evans) were published. Both books were shortlisted for the 2019
Vine Awards for Canadian Jewish Literature in the Poetry and Non-Fiction categories respectively. ''Infinite Gradation'' won the Non-Fiction prize.
Michaels published her third novel, ''
Held'', in November 2023. It was shortlisted for the 2024
Booker Prize, and won the 2024
Giller Prize.
In 2023, she was elected as a
Royal Society of Literature
The Royal Society of Literature (RSL) is a learned society founded in 1820 by King George IV to "reward literary merit and excite literary talent". A charity that represents the voice of literature in the UK, the RSL has about 800 Fellows, elect ...
International Writer
Publications
Poetry collections
Novels
Other selected works
* ''The Passion of Lavinia Andronicus'' (2005)
* ''Vanishing Points'' (2005)
* ''Sixty-Six Books'' (2011)
* ''Sea of Lanterns'' (2012)
* ''The Adventures of Miss Petitfour'' (2015)
* ''Infinite Gradation'' (2017)
* ''The Further Adventures of Miss Petitfour (2022)''
Adaptations
''
Fugitive Pieces'' was directed and adapted for the screen by
Jeremy Podeswa, scored by Nikos Kypourgos, and selected to open the 2007
Toronto International Film Festival
The Toronto International Film Festival (TIFF, often stylized as tiff) is one of the most prestigious and largest publicly attended film festivals in the world. Founded in 1976, the festival takes place every year in early September. The organi ...
. Michaels' debut novel was also adapted into a radio drama for
BBC Radio 3
BBC Radio 3 is a British national radio station owned and operated by the BBC. It replaced the BBC Third Programme in 1967 and broadcasts classical music and opera, with jazz, world music, Radio drama, drama, High culture, culture and the arts ...
.
''Skin Divers'' was adapted in 2009 for the ''
National Ballet of Canada'' by Dominique Dumais with music by
Gavin Bryars
Richard Gavin Bryars (; born 16 January 1943) is an English composer and double bassist. He has worked in jazz, free improvisation, minimalism, Musical historicism, historicism, Avant-garde music, avant-garde, and experimental music.
Early lif ...
''.'' Incorporating spoken word and visual projections, ''Skin Divers'' explores "the body as a living archive of experience, or a museum of memory."
References
External links
Profile at the University of TorontoCanadian Authors website
{{DEFAULTSORT:Michaels, Anne
1958 births
Living people
Canadian women poets
University of Toronto alumni
Canadian women novelists
Academic staff of the University of Toronto
Jewish Canadian writers
Poets laureate of Toronto
20th-century Canadian novelists
20th-century Canadian poets
21st-century Canadian novelists
20th-century Canadian women writers
21st-century Canadian women writers
Amazon.ca First Novel Award winners
Vaughan Road Academy alumni
21st-century Canadian poets
Novelists from Toronto