Carolyn Smart’s first four collections of poetry and her prizewinning memoir, At the End of the Day>, all drew on her own life for inspiration. In her latest collection, Hooked, she turns instead to the lives of others, brilliantly recreating the voices of seven famous or infamous women, each born between the First and Second World Wars, each beset by obsession and addiction. For these women, Carolyn acts as “a deeply feeling and deeply attentive witness,” writes poet and novelist Anne Michaels.

“I think there is a hook in everyone, somewhere,” Carolyn explains. “It only takes emotion to reveal it.”

These powerful poems have been adapted for performance by Nicky Guadagni in a unique format, producing what Maclean’s writer Brian D. Johnson calls a “tour-de-force” evening of theatre.

Born in England, Carolyn came to Canada at the age of six. Following a short stint in a British boarding school, she returned to Toronto to finish her education, where, inspired by e.e. cummings and Leonard Cohen, she began writing poems. Later, she worked for several years in publishing, where she edited collections by Gwendolyn MacEwen, Don Coles, and Tom Wayman, and served as publicist for Hugh MacLennan and Dennis Lee.

Carolyn’s first collection of poetry appeared in 1981. Since then, she’s published five books, including Stoning the Moon and The Way to Come Home. Her poems
have appeared in over 150 magazines and anthologies, she’s been shortlisted for a National Magazine Award, and in 1993 she won the personal essay category of the CBC Literary Contest.

Carolyn and her husband live just north of Kingston. In addition to writing, she teaches creative writing at Queen’s University, where she has inspired and guided a generation of students.

Photo credit: Bernard Clark

Website: Brick Books, Hooked in House