Leah McLaren

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Leah McLaren (born 1975) is a Canadian author and is employed by the daily newspaper The Globe and Mail.

Born in Peterborough, Ontario, McLaren attended Claude Watson School for the Arts in Toronto. She studied English literature at McGill University in Montreal, and Trent University in Peterborough, receiving a Bachelor of Arts degree in English from the latter in 1998. While at Trent she received several awards for her proficiency in English and wrote the radio drama Percy and the Pomegranate.

When she was eighteen, McLaren worked as an intern and wrote a feature article for the Canadian monthly This Magazine. After several summers as an intern at The Globe and Mail (where her mother, Cecily Ross, is an editor) McLaren became an arts reporter, and then the newspaper's London arts correspondent. While in England, her writing was published in several newspapers including The Times, The Evening Standard, and The Sunday Telegraph, as well as in the weekly magazine The Spectator, for which she wrote a controversial and widely read cover story on the romantic failure of the modern English male.[1]

McLaren is best known for her regular Saturday column in The Globe and Mail, in which she talks about living as a single woman in modern-day Toronto. She also writes "The Leah Files", a monthly column in Flare, Canada's top-selling fashion magazine. She has written for other publications including Toronto Life, McGill Daily, ROB, Fashion, and EnRoute.

McLaren's first novel, The Continuity Girl was published by Harper Collins in 2005. It follows a young film professional — the titular "continuity girl" — in her search for a perfect — and unsuspecting — man to father her child. The novel received mixed reviews.

[edit] Controversy

McLaren's Globe and Mail lifestyle column focuses, often facetiously, on the predicaments facing a professional young woman with apparently shallow interests. Similar columns have appeared in other Western newspapers. For example, Rebecca Eckler had a similar column at the National Post, also based in Toronto.

[edit] External links

[edit] References

  1. ^ "The tragic ineptitude of the English male" The Spectator 27 July 2002.