Mick Lowe


Mick Ellenwood Lowe is an award-winning author, journalist, and writer based in Sudbury, Ontario, whose work has appeared in a diverse range of Canadian publications including Maclean's, Canadian Business, Canadian Lawyer, The Globe and Mail, the Financial Post Magazine and Northern Ontario Business.
Born in Omaha, Nebraska in 1947 to Jack and Grace Lowe, he moved to Canada in the late 1960s.
Lowe has worked as a staff writer at the Lincoln Daily Star, staff writer and columnist at the Daily Nebraskan, staff writer at The Georgia Straight , co-founder of The Grape , editor at The Gauntlet, freelance correspondent for The Globe and Mail, staff reporter and producer of Morning North at CBCS-FM, and a lecturer in journalism at Cambrian College.
He followed his first non-fiction book, "Conspiracy of Brothers," which was a national bestseller and winner of the for Best NonFiction Crime Book in 1989, with a biography of prisoner rights advocate Claire Culhane, "One Woman Army: The Life of Claire Culhane," and then a book on the rush to exploit the Voisey's Bay nickel deposit, "Premature Bonanza: Standoff at Voisey's Bay."
In 2008, he suffered a stroke that interrupted his writing life, among other things. In early 2012, he reignited his career with a 25th anniversary re-release of "."
Soon after, Mick began a new chapter: writing a fictional series about Sudbury's mining history called the Nickel Range Trilogy.
The first book in the series, "," is set in 1963, during a particularly violent time in Sudbury's history: the Steelworkers' raids on the then-powerful Mine Mill union.
The second book, "," is set in 1968, and is about health and safety concerns associated with the Copper Cliff Smelter.
The 1978-1979 Steelworkers strike is the subject of Mick's latest novel, "." It's the third and final volume in the Nickel Range Trilogy fiction series.

Books