Lisa Bird-Wilson

Lisa Bird-Wilson is a Métis and nêhiyaw writer from Saskatchewan.

Biography
A survivor of the Sixties Scoop, as a child Bird-Wilson was adopted, disconnecting her from her Cree and Métis heritage. This experience informs much of her writing.

Bird-Wilson's debut collection of short stories, Just Pretending (2013), was chosen as the Saskatchewan Library Association's 2019 One Book One Province. The book won four Saskatchewan Book Awards (including 2014 book of the year), and was a finalist for the 2014 Danuta Gleed Literary Award. Reviewing the stories for The /tƐmz/ Review, Amy Mitchell says "the stories and characters are so alive, and the writing is so beautiful in its stripped-down simplicity."

She has also published poetry and non-fiction books.

, Bird-Wilson is CEO of the Gabriel Dumont Institute, the education arm of the Métis Nation-Saskatchewan. She is also a founding board member and chair of the Ânskohk Aboriginal Writers' Circle and founding president of the Saskatchewan Aboriginal Literacy Network.

Works

 * An Institute of Our Own: A History of the Gabriel Dumont Institute, non-fiction (Gabriel Dumont Press, 2011)
 * Just Pretending, short stories (Coteau Books, 2013)
 * The Red Files, poetry (Nightwood Editions, 2016)
 * Probably Ruby, novel (Doubleday Canada, 2021)

Awards

 * 2014
 * Shortlisted for the Danuta Gleed Literary Award for Just Pretending
 * University of Regina Book of the Year for Just Pretending
 * SaskPower Fiction Award for Just Pretending
 * Rasmussen, Rasmussen & Charowsky Aboriginal Peoples' Writing Award for Just Pretending
 * First Nations University of Canada Aboriginal Peoples' Publishing Award for Just Pretending
 * YWCA Women of Distinction Award for Arts, Culture or Heritage
 * 2017
 * John Hodgin's Founder Award for short story "Counselling"
 * 2018
 * Saskatchewan Arts Board, RBC Emerging Artist Award
 * 2019
 * Silver Medal, Column, National Magazine Awards for "Clowns, Cake, Canoes: This is Canada?"
 * 2022
 * Shortlisted for the Amazon.ca First Novel Award for Probably Ruby
 * Finalist for the 2022 Governor General's Literary Award for Fiction for "Probably Ruby"; 2022