Culled from the hand-written pages in old-fashioned scribblers and
almost-forgotten typescripts amid drafts for her published stories,
Unvarnished features among the last unpublished and highly personal
writings of the iconic Canadian author and artist Emily Carr.
This highly readable manuscript--edited by Royal BC Museum curator
emerita Kathryn Bridge and illustrated with sketches and photographs
from the BC Archives--spans nearly four decades, from 1899 to 1944. In
an almost stream-of-consciousness outpouring of stories, Carr chronicles
her early years as an art student in England, her life-altering sojourn
in France and subsequent travels to Indigenous villages along the coast,
her encounters with the Group of Seven, conversations with artist Lawren
Harris, and her sketching trips in the "Elephant" caravan in the company
of a quirky menagerie. Also included are stories written in hospital
recovering from a stroke, a particularly vulnerable time in her life.
Emily Carr's books have remained in nearly continuous print since the
1940s. Unvarnished is a fresh addition to her enduring oeuvre, to be
enjoyed as a complement to her other writings or as a jewel in its own
right.