Sylvia Fraser is a Canadian novelist, journalist and travel writer. Fraser was educated at the University of Western Ontario. In her long year career as a journalist, she has written hundreds of articles, beginning as a feature writer for the TorontoStar Weekly, and continuing with articles for many other magazines and newspapers including The Globe and Mail, Saturday Night, Chatelaine, The Walrus and Toronto Life. She taught creative writing for many years at Banff Centre and at various university workshops. She has participated in extensive media tours, given lectures and readings throughout Canada, the United States, Britain and Sweden. She served on the Arts Advisory Panel to the Canada Council and was a member of Canada Council's 1985 cultural delegation to China. She was a founding member of the Writers' Union of Canada and for many years was on the executive of the Writers' Trust of Canada, a charitable organization for the support of Canadian authors and literature. Fraser lives in Toronto, Ontario.
Early life and education
Fraser was born in Hamilton, Ontario. Her father worked for a steel company and her mother was involved in church and community work. After working for several years working as a journalist, she began writing novels after the magazine she wrote for went out of business. Fraser was repeatedly sexually abused by her father from her early childhood to her late teens, which became a recurring topic in several of her fiction and non-fiction works, including Pandora, My Father's House, The Book of Strange, and The Ancestral Suitcase. However, she repressed these memories for most of her life, and did not remember them until she began writing about it in these works.
Career
Fraser's first novel, Pandora, tells the story of a young girl who is sexually abused by the man who delivers bread to her house. It was highly regarded for its prose and launched Fraser's career in Canadian Literature. Fraser's 1987 memoir, My Father's House, recounts the sexual abuse committed to her by her father throughout her childhood. It won the Canadian Authors AssociationLiterary Award for non-fiction. Scholars have asserted that it sets an exemplary model of the process of surviving trauma. Her subsequent books, The Book of Strange and The Ancestral Suitcase deal with nonlinear time, reincarnation, and memory.