Website:
http://carolbruneau.com/
http://www.carolbruneausblog.blogspot.com/
Email:
c/o Writers' Federation of Nova Scotia
Carol Bruneau is the author of two critically acclaimed collections of short fiction, After the Angel Mill (1995) and Depth Rapture (1998), and three novels, Glass Voices (2007), named a Globe and Mail Best Book, Berth (2005) and Purple for Sky (2000). Published in the U.S. as A Purple Thread for Sky, the novel won the 2001 Thomas Raddall Atlantic Fiction Award and the Dartmouth Book Award.
Shortlisted the same year for the Pearson Readers' Choice Award, Purple for Sky was recommended by Pamela Wallin on the CBC's Canada Reads and as a prime pick on her Chapters website. In the U.S., Booklist praised it as a "hilarious, moving and poetic book." Kirkus called it "a refreshingly unsentimental debut [...] deeply original in style. In Canada, Purple for Sky was included in The Globe and Mail's "Best Books of 2000." They praised Bruneau as "a first-class storyteller who uses words magically," and Chatelaine called it "a warm engaging look at the small dramas that shape our lives...salted with down-home metaphors and pithy observations."
Considered "one of the brightest lights of Atlantic fiction by acclaimed novelist Joan Clark, Bruneau's stories have been anthologized recently in Victory Meat, edited by Lynn Coady, and Atlantica: Stories from the Maritimes and Newfoundland, edited by Lesley Choyce. As well, Bruneau has contributed book reviews to The Globe and Mail, Quill & Quire, Atlantic Books Today and the Halifax Chronicle-Herald, which has also published her essays and articles.
Besides the Atlantic Fiction and Dartmouth Book prizes, Bruneau has been awarded four grants by the Canada Council for the Arts, and appointments in 2001 as Writer-in-Residence at Acadia University and in 2009 as Writer-in-Residence at Dalhousie University. Among many guest appearances, she has read at the International Festival of Authors in Toronto, the Eden Mills writers' festival in Ontario, the Northrop Frye Festival in New Brunswick, Read-by-the-Sea in Nova Scotia, and the Winterset Festival in Newfoundland, where she appeared with Cape Breton writers Alistair MacLeod and D.R. MacDonald. Though born and raised in mainland Nova Scotia, Bruneau's maternal family roots are on the island.
Bruneau teaches classes and workshops in fiction writing, and has also worked as a photo editor and a journalist. She teaches critical writing part time at NSCAD University and fiction-writing at Dalhousie.
- Glass Voices. Cormorant Books, 2007. ISBN 978-1-897151-12-9.
- Click here for more information.
- Invaders, A Collection of Short Stories. Manuscript available, Shaun Bradley & Don Sedgwick, Transatlantic Literary Agency.
- Berth. Cormorant, 2005. ISBN 1-896951-85-6.
- Click here for more information.
- "The Tarot Reader." Atlantica: Stories from the Maritimes and Newfoundland. Lesley Choyce, Editor. Goose Lane Editions, 2001. ISBN 0-8692-309-0.
- Click here for more information.
- A Purple Thread for Sky. (US edition of Purple for Sky). Carroll & Graff, 2001. ISBN 0-7867-0860-3.
- "An endearing, entertaining tale by a first-class storyteller [...] Meticulously crafted and multi-textured." - Globe & Mail
- "Reminiscent of Margaret Laurence's The Stone Angel [...] An intricate and compelling novel [...] [that] holds a rich inventory of complex characters, historical details, and hard-won truths." - Atlantic Books Today
- Why Men Fish Where They Do. Gaspereau Press, 2001 (chapbook). ISBN 1-894031-38-5.
- Purple for Sky. Cormorant Books, 2000. ISBN 1-896951-24-4.
- Winner of the 2001 Thomas Head Raddall Atlantic Fiction Award
- Winner of the 2001 Dartmouth Book Award (Fiction).
- "A remarkable job [...] Entertaining [...] Lucinda's voice is especially dazzling." - National Post
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- Depth Rapture. Cormorant Books, 1998. ISBN 1-896951-07-4.
- "Carol Bruneau knows how to write a short story. All the stories in the collection are subtly and skilfully turned into vessels that have found their natural shape [...] With her compassionate eye, her understanding of the human condition, her strong sense of place, her clean, lyrical prose, Carol Bruneau is an easy writer to praise." - from "Depth Rapture." Review by Joan Clark, Pottersfield Portfolio, Spring 1998.
- "First You See a Light." Gifts to Last.. Goose Lane Editions, 1996. ISBN 0-86492-206-X.
- After the Angel Mill. Cormorant Books, 1995. ISBN 0-920953-91-3.
- "Individually, the stories can all stand alone [...] but read together and in order, they comprise a luminous whole greater than the sum of the parts." - from "After the Angel Mill." Review by Pamela Scott-Crace. Pottersfield Portfolio, Winter 1996.
- "These women do not wallow." - from "Secret Rituals." Christine Dewar. Event, Vol. 25, No. 2.
- "Greta's Gamble" a three-part series, CBC Radio (Halifax), 1998.
Awarded Canada Council Explorations Grant, 1994.
Second-prize winner for children's writing, Atlantic Writing Awards, 1994.




