Shauntay Grant Explained

Shauntay Grant
Birth Place:Halifax, Nova Scotia
Occupation:Writer, professor
Genre:Poetry, Children's Novel, Playwriting, Spoken Word
Notableworks:
  • Africville
  • Up Home
Website:shauntaygrant.com

Shauntay Grant is a Canadian author, poet, playwright, and professor. Between 2009 and 2011, she served as the third poet laureate of Halifax, Nova Scotia. She is known for writing Africville, a children's picture book about a black community by the same name that was razed by the city of Halifax in the 1960s. "Africville" was nominated for a 2018 Governor General’s Literary Award. The book also won the 2019 Marilyn Baillie Picture Book Award, and was among 13 picture books listed on the United States Board on Books for Young People's 2019 USBBY Outstanding International Books List.

Early life and education

Grant was born in Halifax, Nova Scotia. She has a degree in music from Dalhousie University and a degree in journalism from the University of King's College.[1]

Career

Grant began publishing her work after she was approached by Sandra McIntyre, a senior editor at Nimbus Publishing, during an event where she read a poem from her teenage years. The poem, called "Remember Preston", talked about her childhood experiences in North Preston, and on McIntyre's suggestion, was turned into a children's book, released in 2008 by the name of Up Home. Similarly, her following two books, The City Speaks In Drums (2010) and Apples and Butterflies (2012), were based on poems written by Grant.

While serving as Halifax's Poet Laureate, Grant organized the first national gathering of Canadian Poets Laureate, which happened in 2010.

In 2019, Grant's play, The Bridge, premiered at Neptune Theatre in Halifax as a co-production between Neptune and 2b Theatre, in association with Obsidian Theatre.[2] She developed the play over several years and workshopped it with Eastern Front Theatre and Black Theatre Workshop. The Bridge tells the story of two estranged brothers in a rural Nova Scotian Black community.[3] Grant won Outstanding New Play by a Nova Scotian at the 2020 Merritt Awards for The Bridge, which was also nominated for Outstanding Production.[4] [5] In 2020, her board book for children, My Hair is Beautiful, was selected as one of the Best of the Year by School Library Journal blogger Betsy Bird in her Fuse 8 Production review of children's books.

Grant is a former host of CBC Radio's national Poetry Face-Off and regional concert music program All The Best. She currently works as an associate professor for Dalhousie University, where she teaches creative writing.

Awards and honours

Publications

Children's books

Plays

Spoken Word

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Knox. Carsten. 18 June 2009. My summer: Shauntay Grant, poet, broadcaster. 30 September 2020. The Coast Halifax. en.
  2. News: Arsenault. Tim. 23 January 2019. Neptune Theatre's The path to The Bridge a locally cultivated work. The Chronicle Herald. 30 September 2020.
  3. Web site: Thorne. Tara. 24 January 2019. The Bridge's community connections. 30 September 2020. The Coast Halifax. en.
  4. News: 3 March 2020. Color Purple, The Bridge nab Merritt nominations. Chronicle Herald. 30 September 2020.
  5. Web site: Mullin. Morgan. 1 April 2020. Here's everyone who won at Theatre Nova Scotia's Merritt Awards this week. 30 September 2020. The Coast Halifax. en.