 |
With a true gift for engaging
readers, Elizabeth Grandbois is one of the mos tinteresting poets to emerge
on the Canadian scene in years.
Grandbois is afflicted with amyotrophic lateral
sclerosis, or ALS (Lou Gehrig's disease), a progressive fatal neuromuscular
disease that causes muscles to lose stregnth , eventually resulting in
paralysis and death.
The terminally ill author has infused much of
her writing with a sense of immediacy borne of trying to cope with a fatal
disrase for which there is no cure.
Indeed, Grandbois' poetry has an intensity owed
to her own heightened sense of mortality.
Born and raised in Hamilton, Elizabeth Ann MacFarlane
was a second-youngest of five children.
After spending her childhood in Hamilton, she
studied nursing in Toronto and met and married Marc Grandbois shortly
after graduating in 1973.
However, her nursing career ended when she was
diagnosed with ALS in 1998.
Grandbois immediatly began fighting ALS, advocating
and fund raising, organizing benefit concerts, public speaking tours and
media interviews.
She's been the subject of a seemingly endless
stream of newspaper and magazine articles, radio and television programs.
Grandbois has been a guest on such popular programs
as The Vicki Banereau Show, Canada AM, CBC's Health Matters, Michael Coren
Live, The Life Network and Discovery TV's Heath program.
Radio shows have included CBC Radio's First Person
Singular, where she read aloud her own story of ALS before a receptive
responsive national audience.
Grandbois is also the source of inspiration behind
Elizabeth's Concert of Hope, the annual benefit concerts that raise funds
for the ALS Society in the fight against Lou Gehrig Disease. Concert performers
have included Murray McLauchlan, Ian Thomas, the Nylons and many other
legendary acts.
She's also raised awareness of ALS through her
public speaking toursand lecture on behalf of ALS
Canada. Grandbois is also raising ALS through her captivating prose
and poetry.
Not that all of her poems purely deal with her
disease. Many poems carry messages of hope, insightful observations and
deep insight into the art of living and the ability to love the of life.
Some of her critically acclaimed poetry was previously
published by the Tower Poetry Society. Her poem The Lure of Sleep provided
the theme for ther National Symposium of Sleep Disorders at the University
of Toronto. And her poem In Dreams was the highlight of ALS Fundraising
Walk 2001 Closing Ceremonies.
Cherish Each Day, her own story of life with
ALS, was featured in Canadian Living Magazine, reaching a responsive national
audience.
In an unprecendented move, Canadian Living recently
responded to an outpouring of concern from it's readers by running an
article assuring them that Elizabeth's ALS is is now progressing more
slowly and she's focusing on her writing.
Grandbois currently resides in Burlington with
her husband Marc, and their children: Renee, Philippe and Andre.
In Dreams is her first book of poetry.
|