Sarah de Leeuw is an award-winning Canadian writer and researcher whose authored publications include Unmarked: Landscapes Along Highway 16, Frontlines: Portraits of Caregivers in Northern British Columbia, Geographies of a Lover and Skeena.
Education
She earned a Bachelor of Fine Arts (Bachelor of Fine Arts) in creative writing from the University of Victoria where she worked on the student newspaper, The Martlet and a Doctor of Philosophy in cultural/historical geography from Queen"s University.
Career
Her current research includes:
Colonialism in British Columbia
Social determinants of Indigenous health
Impact of medical programs in northern and rural geographies including doctor-patient relationships with Aboriginal peoples. A native of British Columbia, she grew up in Duncan, the Queen Charlotte Islands and Terrace. She has worked as a tug boat driver, logging camp cook and journalist.
Her books Unmarked: Landscapes Along Highway 16 (2004) and Frontlines: Portraits of Caregivers in Northern British Columbia (2011) reflect her interest in geography and small communities in British Columbia.
Unmarked is a series of short essays, each linked to a specific place, evoking the local geography and community, and often linked to memories from de Leeuw"s childhood. Frontlines is a series of biographical essays about people working in health care and their connections with community.
Geographies of a Lover (2012), described by poet Nancy Holmes as "a true eco-erotic text that fuses the lonely carnality of body with the vulnerable vastness of continental landscapes" also represents de Leeuw"s interest in human relationships with physical geography. In fall 2015, Caitlin Press published Skeena, a single poetic narrative spanning more than ninety pages that is an elegy to and celebration of British Columbia’s second-longest river, one at the centre of contemporary conversations about resource extraction and northern geographies.
Slow. Slow.".