File 42 - Drafts of poems published in All the names between.

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Drafts of poems published in All the names between.

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SCA405-GA472-2-42

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(1964-2021)

Biographical history

Julia McCarthy was born in Toronto in 1964. In 1987, McCarthy graduated with a bachelor's degree from the University of Waterloo. In 1988, she audited a course in Developmental Psychology from Seattle University. And between 1991 and 1994, she audited select courses in Child, Adolescent, and Adult Psychology from the University of West Georgia.

McCarthy lived in the United States of America for ten years, most notably in Alaska and Georgia where she was guest lecturer in English and Psychology at the University of West Georgia (1992). She also lived in Norway and South Africa before returning to Canada and settling in Upper Kennetcook (East Hants) and the Annapolis Valley, Nova Scotia. While in Nova Scotia, McCarthy worked as a freelance writer, teacher of creative writing, editor, and potter. As a potter, McCarthy was the owner of Mudaphors Studio (in Nova Scotia). McCarthy was married twice, first to Richard Alapeck and later to Dr. Graham Stewart.

In 2002, McCarthy published her first book Stormthrower. In 2010, she published her second book Return from Erebus for which she won the Canadian Authors Association Poetry Award in 2011. In 2017, McCarthy published her third anthology All the Names Between which was a shortlisted finalist for the Governor General's Award for English-language poetry at the 2017 Governor General's Awards and was awarded the J. M. Abraham Poetry Award (formerly the Atlantic Poetry Prize).

Julia McCarthy died in 2021.

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Scope and content

Poems and drafts of poems written and annotated by Julia McCarthy and later included in her book All the Names between. Includes poems: “A white room full of white birds,” “All the hidden places,” “A house waiting to be haunted,” “After midnight,” “Little fires” (later titled “Yellow birds in cages of water”), “The word no one knows” (later titled “A word no one knows”), “Spring equinox,” “The last silence,” “The animate breath” (also titled “Any place”), “Séance,” “A broken necklace,” “A red singing” also titled “How the dead speak,” “Flying the words home,” “Initiation,” “The book of obscure sorrows,” “A separate kingdom (white-nose fungus),” “Bat song,” “Last rites” also titled “The arsonist,” “When the stones wept,” “Where once there were stairs,” “Transmigration,” “Lorca’s ants,” “The earth’s thaumaturgy,” “My grief has waited for this” (later titled “As the day keeps”), “On the cusp of Spring,” “The long chain,” “The prescience of Spring” (later titled “Siamese forests”), “Somnambulant meadows” also titled “A simple beginning and end,” “A name I once wore,” “Field of language (silent film),” “When night is not night enough” (later titled “When night”), “Throwing the bones: moon song,” and “The word no one knows.”

Also contains poems “Pack,” “A conversation without words,” “Fool moon” also titled “The white spider,” “The rhythms of birds,” “The first nights,” “Playing the invisible,” “My life as a comma,” “Nest,” “Artificial limbs” also titled “Phantom limbs,” “Before I disappeared,” “Elsie’s field,” “On form,” “Black scissors,” “Longhorn spruce beetle,” “Where the unseen gathers,” “Feeding the dead,” “After Winter,” “Airmail or on finding a dead chickadee,” “Shadow play,” “Slap stick,” and “What holds up my house.”

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Donated by the Estate of Julia McCarthy in 2021.

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  • English

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The records in this file were physically separated into multiple folders.

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Described by CGD in 2022.

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  • English

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