GREGORY SCOFIELD is a Red River Metis of Cree, Scottish and European descent whose ancestry can be traced to the fur trade and Metis community of Kinosota, Manitoba. He has taught creative writing and First Nations and Metis literature at Brandon University, Emily Carr University of Art + Design and the Alberta University of the Arts. He currently holds the position of associate professor in the department of creative writing at the University of Victoria. Scofield won the Dorothy Livesay Poetry Prize in 1994 for his debut collection, The Gathering- Stones for the Medicine Wheel, and has since published seven further volumes of poetry, includingWitness, I Am. He has served as writer-in-residence at the University of Manitoba, the University of Winnipeg and Memorial University of Newfoundland. He is the recipient of the Queen's Diamond Jubilee Medal (2012), and most recently the Writers' Trust of Canada Latner Poetry Prize (2016), awarded to a mid-career poet in recognition of a remarkable body of work. Further to writing and teaching, Scofield is also a skilled beadworker, and he creates in the medium of traditional Metis arts. He continues to assemble a collection of mid-to-late nineteenth-century Cree-Metis artifacts, which are used as learning and teaching pieces. Scofield's first memoir, Thunder Through My Veins, will be re-published in fall 2019. Hissecond memoir, Sitting With Charlotte- Stitching My History Bead by Bead (Doubleday Canada), will be published in 2021.
Gregory Scofield is the literary uncle to all of Indigenous Lit. . . . The return of Thunder Through My Veins marks an important shift in thinking about the cyclical nature of how our stories weave through time. --Joshua Whitehead, author of Jonny Appleseed It's impossible to read Thunder Through My Veins and not be moved by Gregory Scofield's story and transported by his powerful and widely-admired prose. . . . Gregory Scofield can write. He tells his story with a simple yet engaging honesty that doesn't ask for sympathy or even understanding. And--yet--somehow the reader can't help but offer both. Like the tree that grew in Brooklyn, Scofield has grown against impossible odds to offer hope to any that might be following. --January Magazine