Daria Salamon’s columns and
articles have been featured in Uptown Magazine, Winnipeg Free Press
and The Globe and Mail.
Her short fiction and creative non-fiction has been shortlisted
for the
Writers' Union of Canada's Emerging Writer Short Fiction Award, the Larry Turner Award for Creative Non-Fiction, and
the Canadian
Author's Association's North of 55 Writing Contest.
After studying French in Cannes and Montreal, Daria earned degrees
in education and English literature from the University
of Manitoba and the University of Winnipeg. She was an
Anne Szumilgalski Scholarship recipient for the Sage Hill Writing Experience in 2006, and has received two writer’s
grants from the Winnipeg Arts Council. An avid member of the writing community, Daria serves on the Board of Directors
of Prairie Fire Magazine. She lives in Winnipeg,
Manitoba.
author photo by Mandy Malazdrewich
Forthcoming:
The Prairie Bridesmaid
(Key Porter, 2008)
Just cresting her thirties, Anna Lasko is a frustrated high
school teacher whose almost ex-boyfriend,
Adam, is away on temporary assignment in Europe. She finds herself tricked into
a break-up-with-the-bad-boyfriend
intervention by her supportive but meddling girlfriends. To cope with it all, Anna starts smoking again, keeps
nightly counsel with her backyard squirrel, Buddy, and starts sessions with a caring but fashion-challenged
therapist. Her well-intentioned family adds to the emotional workload when her beautiful and free-spirited
sister decides to move to the Middle East with her boyfriend. Luckily, Anna has her devoted grandmother
who constantly says it like
it is, refuses to conform to anyone’s requests, and continues to live on her
prairie farm half-blind, happy, and alone.
Spectacularly fun and rich with wit and savvy,
The Prairie Bridesmaid is a delicious debut novel about the bonds that
break and make family, friendship, and love.
World Rights excluding: North America (2008)
Advance Praise:
…The Prairie Bridesmaid is a witty, sardonic, and touching story of self-discovery leading to liberation. Daria Salamon's writing is like a breath of fresh Winnipeg air.”
- Nia Vardalos, screenwriter and star of My Big Fat Greek Wedding
…I was knocked over by this novel. It's funny,
has a wonderful voice and a heart to it that I don't often see, as a
reader. Every bit as entertaining as A Complicated Kindness
– I laughed my ass off.”
- Stephen Galloway, author of Ascension
and The Cellist of Sarajevo
…In reading this book, I was touched and inspired. It is original and
well-written and points to a reality both relevant and poignant for women with whom I share a generation.
Daria Salamon writes with wit and compassion and manages to dignify the thoughts, emotions and sometimes
treacherous turns that are part of growing up as women in Canada.”
- Chantal Kreviazuk,
singer/songwriter
…From the first page of The Prairie Bridesmaid
you can't help caring about Anna and her life.
She's recovering from breaking
up with Adam, but she doesn't want our sympathy; more, she wants to understand what's
happened to her and how she
ended up with a guy like him. Although the tone of Daria Salamon's novel is cheerful,
the story is darker and deftly
told. Salamon is a skillful writer, keeping a tight reign on the emotional depth of
The Prairie Bridesmaid. This is chick-lit for grown-ups. And it's good.”
- Alice Kuipers,
author of Notes on the Refrigerator Door
Short Fiction:
"Bread & Water"
Anthology of Manitoba Writers
Manitoba Writers' Guild, Fall 2007
Articles and Columns
Uptown Magazine
"Toronto International Film Festival"
feature article,
Sept. 2005
Winnipeg Free Press
The Wedding Diaries
monthly humour column on wedding planning,
2005
"After by Claire Tristam"
book review, Aug 2004
Cannes International Film Festival
daily narrative columns, May 2004
"The Streets of Winter by Stephen Henighan"
book review, May 2004
"A History of Love & Eggs at the Table"
The View From Here April 12, 2004
"Google Never Forgets"
The View From Here March 31, 2004
"Welcome to Cellular Hell"
In My Humble Opinion July 24, 2003
"Surf City"
travel humourous feature, July 24, 2003
"Grandmother, Granddaughter Divided"
The View From Here July 23, 2002
The Globe and Mail
"Be Jingle Generous, but Beware the Holiday Bilk"
Facts & Arguments Dec. 23, 2003