Gary Geddes was born in Vancouver, B.C. in 1940. Except for a four year sojourn in Saskatchewan as a child, he was resident on the west coast
until 1963, gillnetting, driving water taxi, working at the B.C. Sugar Refinery, taking a degree in English and Philosophy at U.B.C. and teaching
for a year on Texada Island. After completing a postgraduate Diploma in Education at Reading University in the U.K, followed by an M.A. and Ph.D.
in English at University of Toronto, he lectured at the University of Victoria (1972 1974). He taught English and Creative Writing widely throughout
Canada to support his passion for writing, but mainly at Concordia University in Montreal from 1978 1998. He was then given an honorary three year
visiting appointment as Distinguished Professor of Canadian Culture in the Center for Canadian American Studies at Western Washington University in
Bellingham. He has had numerous appointments as writer in residence, including University of Alberta, Malaspina University College, University of
Ottawa, and Green College, UBC.
In addition to writing and editing more than thirty five books of poetry, fiction, drama, non fiction, criticism, translation and anthologies,
Geddes has been very active in promoting other writers. He was founding editor of a series of critical monographs called Studies in Canadian
Literature (Copp Clark / McGill Queens). He reviewed poetry regularly for the Globe & Mail and started several publishing companies, including
Quadrant Editions and Cormorant Books, famous for its ethnic and literary titles, including Nino Ricci's Lives of the Saints, Jose Leandro Urbina's
Lost Causes, and John Asfour's When the Words Burn: Modern Arabic Poetry in Translation. His best known anthologies, 20th Century Poetry & Poetics
and 15 Canadian Poets (both from Oxford), have gone into numerous editions and have had an enormous impact on the teaching and writing of poetry
in Canada.
Geddes has lectured and performed his work in China, Japan, Indonesia, Hong Kong, the Philippines, Chile, Costa Rica, Nicaragua, the United States,
England, Ireland, Scotland, The Netherlands, Belgium, Germany, Israel, Palestine, Portugal and Italy. His work has been translated into Dutch,
Chinese, Spanish, Portuguese, Italian and French, broadcast several times on CBC and BBC radio, and performed on stage. His national and
international awards include the E.J. Pratt Medal, the National Poetry Prize, the Americas Best Book Award in the 1985 Commonwealth Poetry
Competition, the Writers' Choice Award, National Magazine Gold Award, Poetry Book Society Recommendation (U.K.), the Archibald Lampman Prize
(twice), and the Gabriela Mistral Prize in 1996 for service to literature and the people of Chile (awarded simultaneously to Nobel
laureates Octavio Paz and Vaclav Havel and to Ernesto Cardenal, Rafael Alberti, and Mario Benedetti). His archives have been purchased
and housed in the National Library, Ottawa.
Gary Geddes lives at French Beach on Vancouver Island. His "return" to BC in 1998 is celebrated in his floating memoir,
a non fiction book called Sailing Home: A Journey Through Time, Place and Memory (HarperCollins, 2001), which became a
national bestseller in Canada. Other books about British Columbia include Rivers Inlet (1972),
Skookum Wawa: Writings of the Canadian Northwest
(1975), and Vancouver: Soul of A City (1986). His most recent book of poems is Skaldance (2004).
His best selling non fiction work about an
ancient Asian voyage to the Americas, The Kingdom of Ten Thousand Things: An Impossible Journey from Kabul to Chiapas was released in the
spring of 2005 by HarperCollins. It will be published in trade paperback in August, 2006. Geddes is currently working on an epic poem
about the tragedy at Second Narrows Bridge in Vancouver in 1958.
Poetry:
The Terracotta Army
(Peterloo Poets, UK, 2007, Oberon, Can, 1984)
Skaldance (2004)
Flying Blind (1998)
Active Trading: Selected Poems 1970 1995 (1996)
The Perfect Cold Warrior (1995)
Girl by the Water (1994)
Light of Burning Towers (1990)
No Easy Exit (1989)
Hong Kong (1987)
Changes of State (1986)
The Acid Test (1980)
War & other measures (1976)
Letter of the Master of Horse (1973)
Snakeroot (1973)
Rivers Inlet (1972)
Poems (1971)
Non-Fiction:
Falsework
(Gooselane, 2007)
Kingdom of Ten Thousand Things:
An Impossible Journey from Kabul to Chiapas
(Sterling,
2007, Harper Collins, 2005)
Sailing Home: A Journey through Time, Place & Memory (2001)
Letters from Managua: Meditations on Politics & Art (1990)
Fiction:
The Unsettling of the West (1986)
Anthologies:
20th Century Poetry & Poetics (1969,1973,1985, 1996, 2006)
15 Canadian Poets Times 3 (1971,1977,1988, 2001)
The Art of Short Fiction:An International Anthology (1992;
brief edition, 2000)
Companieros: Writings about Latin America (1990)
Vancouver Soul of A City (1986)
Chinada: Memoirs of the Gang of Seven (1983)
The Inner Ear (1983)
Divided We Stand (1977)
Drama:
Les Maudits Anglais (1984)
Translation:
I Didn't Notice the Mountain Growing Dark (1986),
poems of Li Bai and Du Fu,
translated with the assistance of George Liang
Criticism:
Conrad's Later Novels (1980)