Salgood Sam
Salgood Sam lives in Montreal. His independently produced anthology, Revolver (Spilt Ink, 2004), garnered him a nomination for best emerging talent at the 2005 Doug Wright Awards. Last updated Christmas, 2006.
Jeff Sanford
Jeff Sanford was a Toronto-based journalist whose work appeared in Canadian Business, National Post Business, Investment Executive, and Wealth Professional. He died in 2018. Last updated winter, 2018–2019.
Brett Alexander Savory
Brett Alexander Savory lives in York. He is the Bram Stoker Award–winning editor of ChiZine, the publisher of ChiZine Publications, and a senior editor at Scholastic Canada. He has published two novels and nearly fifty short stories, and writes for Rue Morgue magazine. Last updated Halloween, 2008.
Emily Schultz
Emily Schultz s the co-founder of the on-line journal Joyland, and the host of the Truth and Fiction podcast. Her most recent novel is The Blondes, and her next, Men Walking on Water, will be published in 2017. Last updated summer, 2016.
Dianne Scott
Dianne Scott is a poet, essayist and fiction writer. Her first stab at the mystery genre, Devastation, won the Crime Writers of Canada Arthur Ellis Award for best unpublished crime fiction. She has contributed to the magazine since 2001. Last updated summer, 2019.
Douglas G. Scott
Douglas G. Scott lives in Seaton Village. He works at a Toronto design firm. Last updated summer, 2007.
Walter Scott
Walter Scott is an interdisciplinary artist who works across writing, video, performance, and sculpture. His comic book series, Wendy, explores the life of a fictional young woman living in an urban centre who aspires to global success and art stardom, but whose dreams are perpetually derailed. Wendy has appeared in Canadian Art, Art in America, and Best American Comics, and been published online by the New Yorker. Last updated summer, 2018.
Seth
Seth lives in Guelph, Ontario. He is a cartoonist and book designer. He also writes and draws the comic book Palookaville. His recent works include George Sprott (1894–1975) (Drawn & Quarterly, 2009) and The Great Northern Brotherhood of Canadian Cartoonists (Drawn & Quarterly, 2011). Last updated winter, 2012–2013.
Sarah Meehan Sirk
Sarah Meehan Sirk as nominated for the Journey Prize for her story “Ozk.” Her work has appeared in the New Quarterly, Room, and Joyland.
Carolyn Smart
Carolyn Smart lives in Sydenham, Ontario. Her fifth collection of poems, Hooked, was published in 2009 by Brick Books. She is the founder of the R.B.C. Bronwen Wallace Award for Emerging Writers, and teaches creative writing at Queen’s University. Her Her next book, Careen, will be published in 2015. Last updated winter, 2014–2015.
Caitlin Smith
Caitlin Smith lives in Sussex-Ulster. She is a marketing manager at a book publishing company. Last updated Christmas, 1997.
Phillip Smith
Phillip Smith lives in Cabbagetown. He is the simplifier of technology at Community Bandwidth, a technology practice that works in the not-for-profit, voluntary, and cultural sectors. He was the magazine’s Web manager from 2000 to 2007, and also held the position of photo editor from 1999 to 2005. Last updated summer, 2007.
Russell Smith
Russell Smith writes on the arts for the Globe and Mail and teaches creative writing at the University of Guelph. His most recent book is the collection Confidence. Last updated winter, 2016–2017.
Fiona Smyth
Fiona Smyth lives in Dufferin Grove. Her graphic novel The Never Weres was published last year by Annick. Her illustrations will appear this summer in Cory Silverberg’s picture book, What Makes A Baby. Last updated summer, 2012.
Jay Somerset
Jay Somerset is a writer and editor living in York. From his Spadina Avenue office, he writes about everything from golf to New Age music. “Local Hero,” his profile of the music promoter Dan Burke, from Taddle Creek No. 27, won the Professional Writers Association of Canada’s 2012 features writing award. His work has appeared in the Globe and Mail, Maisonneuve, Reader’s Digest, Signal to Noise, and Maclean’s. Last updated winter, 2012–2013.
Kevin Spenst
Kevin Spenst is the author of Ignite, Jabbering with Bing Bong, and more than a dozen chapbooks, most recently Upend. His next book of poetry, Hearts Amok: A Memoir in Verse, will be published in 2020. Last updated winter, 2019–2020.
Eric Squair
Eric Squair lives in Huron-Sussex. He works in communications and Web design for a multinational environmental organization. Last updated summer, 2007.
Jay Stephens
Jay Stephens is an award-winning cartoonist, best recognized for his TV cartoons Tutenstein and The Secret Saturdays. He created Chickadee magazine’s popular Chick and Dee characters. Last updated summer, 2014.
John Stiles
John Stiles is a writer and filmmaker living in London. He is the author of Scouts are Cancelled (Insomniac, 2002) and The Insolent Boy (Insomniac, 2001). His work has appeared in Pagitica, the Literary Review of Canada, Lichen, Storyteller, the Web zine Another Toronto Quarterly, and the anthology The IV Lounge Reader (Insomniac, 2001). Last updated Christmas, 2006.
Philip Street
Philip Street grew up in Blyth, Ontario, reading comic books and Mad magazine. By the time he was in high school he had decided he would be a cartoonist. He studied English at the University of Toronto and then animation at Sheridan College. His comic strip Fisher appeared in the Globe and Mail for twenty years, starting in 1992, and is now archived on-line. In 2013 the first Fisher collection, When Tom Met Alison, was published by Nestlings Press. Since 1998 Philip has moonlighted during the day as an animator and graphic designer at the CBC in Toronto, where he lives with his wife and son. Last updated winter, 2015–2016.
Meaghan Strimas
Meaghan Strimas lives in Davenport. She works for Quill & Quire and the University of Guelph’s creative writing master-of-fine-arts program. She is the editor of The Selected Gwendolyn MacEwen (Exile, 2008), and the author of two collections of poetry, Junkman’s Daughter (Exile, 2004) and A Good Time Had by All (Exile, 2010). She is currently at work on a novel. Last updated summer, 2011.
Amy Stupavsky
Amy Stupavsky lives in Cabbagetown. She has worked for Brick and was the production editor for a recent issue of Descant. She was also a graduate of the Taddle Creek protégé program. Last updated summer, 2012.
Kate Sutherland
Kate Sutherland used to live in the Annex, but bought a house somewhere else. She is the author of the short story collections All in Together Girls (Thistledown, 2007) and Summer Reading (Thistledown, 1995) and has appeared in the New Quarterly, Queen Street Quarterly, Write, and the anthology The IV Lounge Reader (Insomniac, 2001). She is currently working on a second collection. Last updated summer, 2007.
Susan Swan
Susan Swan lives in Sussex-Ulster. She is the author of Stupid Boys are Good to Relax With (Somerville, 1996) and The Wives of Bath (Knopf, 1993), which was adapted into the 2001 film Lost and Delirious. Last updated summer, 2002.
Shawn Syms
Shawn Syms is the author of the short-story collection Nothing Looks Familiar, which was seized by the Michigan Department of Corrections for its potential to “encourage criminal activity.” Last updated summer, 2016.
Ania Szado
Ania Szado lives in Riverdale. Her fiction has appeared in This, Lichen, and (Ex)cite. Her first novel, Beginning of Was, was published by Penguin in 2004. Last updated summer, 2003.
Taddle Creek
Taddle Creek is Toronto’s general-interest literary magazine. Last updated Christmas, 1997.
Gary Taxali
Gary Taxali lives in the Junction. He is an award-winning illustrator whose work has appeared in many major magazines. He is the proprietor of Chump Toys, and teaches and lectures at various arts organizations and schools. He contributed cover and interior artwork for Aimee Mann’s 2008 album, @#%&*! Smilers, which was nominated for a Grammy Award for best package design. His first children’s book, This Is Silly!, was recently released by Scholastic. Last updated Christmas, 2010.
Jess Taylor
Jess Taylor is the author of the short story collection Pauls, the opening story from which received a National Magazine Award. She is the founder of the Emerging Writers Reading Series and the fiction editor of Little Brother magazine. Last updated summer, 2016.
Souvankham Thammavongsa
Souvankham Thammavongsa is the author of three poetry collections, most recently Light. Last updated winter, 2016–2017.
Yasuko Thanh
Yasuko Thanh is working on a memoir, titled Mistakes to Run With. Her novel, Mysterious Fragrance of the Yellow Mountains, won the 2016 Rogers Writers Trust Fiction Prize. Last updated winter, 2017–2018.
Clive Thompson
Clive Thompson is a contributing writer for the New York Times Magazine and a columnist for Wired. From 1991 to 1992 he was the editor of Acta Victoriana, a publication to which he introduced the future founder of Taddle Creek, an event that indirectly led to this magazine’s creation. Last updated summer, 2013.
Nick Thran
Nick Thran is the author of the poetry collections Earworm and Every Inadequate Name. Last updated summer, 2013.
Matthew Tierney
Matthew Tierney lives in Danforth Village. His most recent book is The Hayflick Limit (Coach House, 2009), which was short-listed for the Trillium Book Award for Poetry. His third collection, Probably Inevitable, will be published this fall by Coach House. Last updated summer, 2012.
Conan Tobias
Conan Tobias is the founder, editor-in-chief, publisher, and art director of Taddle Creek. His profile of the cartoonist and illustrator Lou Skuce, recently was awarded honourable mention at the Heritage Toronto Awards. Last updated winter, 2017–2018.
Tony Tobias
Tony Tobias lives in Summerhill, Toronto. He is a producer and writer with a strong interest in the dynamics of urban life and in what makes a healthy city. He co-produced the award-winning documentary Cities Fit to Live In: Toronto—Struggle for Neighbourhood. Last updated summer, 2010.
Laura Trethewey
Laura Trethewey lives in Parkdale. She is the assistant editor of Broken Pencil and still manages to churn out the occasional zine every few years. Her work has appeared in the Globe and Mail, National Post, and Toronto Life.
Jason Turner
Jason Turner lives in North Vancouver. He has drawn two volumes of True Loves (New Reliable, 2006 and 2009), co-written with his wife, Manien Bothma. He also writes a column for Broken Pencil. Last updated summer, 2010.