Emily Pohl-Weary


Emily Pohl-Weary is a Canadian novelist, poet, university professor, and magazine editor. She is the granddaughter of science fiction writers and editors Judith Merril and Frederik Pohl.

Life

Pohl-Weary is an author and creative writing professor who was born in Toronto, Ontario, Canada.
Her latest book is Ghost Sick, poetry about tragedy and resilience in the Toronto neighbourhood where she grew up.
Her previous books include the young adult novel Not Your Ordinary Wolf Girl, as well as a Hugo Award-winning biography, a female superhero anthology, a poetry collection, and a girl pirate comic. She's currently working on a new novel.

Literary career

Pohl-Weary's second collection of poems, Ghost Sick: A Poetry of Witness won the 2016 Fred Cogswell Award for Excellence in Poetry. Canada's Parliamentary Poet George Elliott Clarke reviewed it thusly in the Halifax Chronicle: "Like Holocaust witness poet Paul Celan, Pohl-Weary checks tabloids, billboards, newsflashes, for the language to bespeak domesticated violence."
Her biography of Judith Merril, Better to Have Loved: The Life of Judith Merril, won the Hugo Award for Best Related Book in 2003 and was a finalist for the Toronto Book Award. Asimov's Science Fiction magazine said in a review: "Assembled from scraps, fragments, previously published essays, and polished manuscripts by Judith Merril's granddaughter, Emily Pohl-Weary has done a superhuman job."
Pohl-Weary's first novel, A Girl Like Sugar, was published by McGilligan Books in 2004. It features a twenty-something girl haunted by her dead rock star boyfriend. She also edited a critically acclaimed female superhero anthology, Girls Who Bite Back: Witches Mutants, Slayers and Freaks. Her subsequent books include a collection of poetry, Iron-on Constellations and the novel Strange Times at Western High, featuring zine-publishing teen sleuth Natalie Fuentes, who teams up with a computer hacker and a graffiti artist to solve crime at her Toronto high school. Her most recent book is the young adult novel Not Your Ordinary Wolf Girl, about a musician who gets bitten by a vicious dog in Central Park and finds herself changing in unusual ways.
In 2008, Emily founded the Toronto Street Writers, a free writing group for inner-city youth in the neighbourhood where she grew up. For three years, she led a weekly writing workshop for residents of Sagatay, a long-term transitional home for First Nations, Metis and Inuit men in Toronto. Her writing workshops focus on writing skills, creative empowerment, learning tools for conflict-resolution, and drawing out participants' unique voices and stories.
For eight years, Pohl-Weary published and wrote for Kiss Machine magazine, which ceased publication in 2008. She is also a former editor of Broken Pencil magazine.

Books