Mick Lowe

Mick (Michael) Ellenwood Lowe is an award-winning author, journalist, and writer, whose work has appeared in a diverse range of Canadian publications including the Globe and Mail, the Financial Post Magazine, and Northern Ontario Business.[1]

Born in Omaha, Nebraska in 1947 to Jack and Grace (Ellenwood) Lowe, Mick moved to Canada in the late 1960s.

Mick has worked as a staff writer at the Lincoln Daily Star (1967–68), staff writer and columnist at the Daily Nebraskan (1966–68), staff writer at The Georgia Straight (Vancouver) (1970–72), co-founder of The Grape (Western Voice) (Vancouver) (1972), editor at The Gauntlet (1973–74), freelance correspondent for the Toronto Globe and Mail (1974-1988), staff reporter at CBC Radio North (Sudbury) (1977–78), founding producer of CBC Radio Morning North Sudbury (1978), and a lecturer in Journalism at Cambrian College (1988).[2]

Lowe received the Arthur B. Ellis Award for best non-fiction crime for his book Conspiracy of Brothers: A True Story of Bikers, Murder, and the Law in 1988.

Published Books:

Lowe lives in Sudbury, Ontario with his wife Anita. He has two daughters: Julia Kathleen and Melanie Nancy.

References

  1. ^ www.micklowe.ca
  2. ^ Canadian Who's Who 1990