Brian Brett

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Brian Brett (born 28 April 1950) is a Canadian poet and novelist.

Born in Vancouver, British Columbia, he attended Simon Fraser University. He lives on Salt Spring Island, British Columbia.

In his 2004 memoir Uproar's Your Only Music, Brett wrote about growing up with a rare endocrine disorder known as Kallmann syndrome, meaning that his body does not naturally produce sex hormones. By the age of 20, he had still not entered puberty, and was believed by his parents and doctors to be intersexed until his Kallmann diagnosis. He began taking testosterone in adulthood.[1]

Contents

[edit] Bibliography

  • Fossil Ground at Phantom Creek - 1976
  • Smoke Without Exit - 1984
  • Evolution in Every Direction - 1987
  • The Fungus Garden - 1988
  • Tanganyika - 1991
  • Allegories of Love and Disaster - 1993
  • Poems: New and Selected - 1993
  • The Colour of Bones in a Stream - 1998
  • Coyote - 2003 ISBN 1-894345-53-3
  • Uproar's Your Only Music - 2004 ISBN 1-55096-607-3

[edit] Discography

  • Night Directions for the Lost - 2003

[edit] References

  1. ^ Brian Brett at abcbookworld

[edit] External links