Mette Bach


Mette Bach is a Danish-Canadian author, teacher, screenwriter, and director. She was born in Denmark and grew up in North Delta. Bach attended Simon Fraser University where she received a Bachelor of Arts in English. She has an MFA from the University of British Columbia's Creative Writing Program.

Books

Mette Bach's first book, Off the Highway: Growing Up in North Delta, was published in 2010 by New Star Books. Off the Highway is the nineteenth book in the "Transmontanus" series, edited by Terry Glavin. The book explores her childhood growing up with immigrant parents in the Lower Mainland of British Columbia.
Bach has also written several young adult novels for Lorimer's high/low series. Killer Drop and Femme are part of the SideStreets series of "edgy high/low fiction for teen reluctant readers." Love is Love, Charming, Cinders, and You're You are part of the Real Love series, "high/low YA novels that focus on realistic teen relationships."

Anthologies (contributor)

Bach's essays have appeared in the following anthologies: First Person Queer, Second Person Queer, Fist of the Spider Woman: Tales of Fear & Queer Desire, and Visible: A Femmethology.

Essays

Bach's essays have appeared in several literary journals, including Room, Journal of Creative Writing, and Harrington Lesbian Fiction Quarterly.

Journalism

Bach's journalism has appeared in Xtra West, Vancouver Review, Vancouver Magazine, Western Living, The Advocate, The Westender, Out Words, Memewar magazine, Canoeroots Magazine, Gay and Lesbian Times, FFWD. She has written book reviews published in The Globe and Mail, Vancouver Review, FFWD, and Just Out Weekly.
Since winter 2004, she has been writing a regular column called "Not That Kind of Girl" for Outlooks Magazine and Out Look Weekly. It has been syndicated in EXP Magazine, She, and Metroline. Selected articles have also been published in San Diego's Gay and Lesbian Times, Out in the Mountains, and Out Word.

Films

Bach’s first screenplay, "Ms. Thing", was directed by Karen X. Tulchinsky in 2010. The film was screened at film festivals internationally.
"Ms. Thing" was First Runner Up at Out On Screen's Short Film Award, and won Audience Choice Award at QueerFruits Australia.
Daniella Sorrentino directed Bach's second screenplay, "Viral", which debuted August 20, 2011 at the Vancouver Queer Film Festival. "B.A.B.S." is Bach's first short film that she directed and debuted at Vancouver Queer Film Festival. "B.A.B.S." also won OutTV's Hot Pink Shorts Audience Choice Award in a three-way tie at the Vancouver Queer Film Festival 2011.