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・ Susan Stone
・ Susan Straight
・ Susan Strange
・ Susan Strange Award
・ Susan Stranks
・ Susan Strasberg
・ Susan Street
・ Susan Strickler
・ Susan Stroman
・ Susan Stryker
・ Susan Stuart Frackelton
・ Susan Su
・ Susan Sullivan
・ Susan Sullivan (politician)
・ Susan Sutherland Isaacs
Susan Swan
・ Susan Swedo
・ Susan Swift
・ Susan T. Sommer
・ Susan Tagicakibau
・ Susan Taslimi
・ Susan Taubes
・ Susan Tedeschi
・ Susan Tegg
・ Susan Tendler
・ Susan Theresa Burke
・ Susan Thomas, Baroness Thomas of Walliswood
・ Susan Thomases
・ Susan Thompson
・ Susan Thornton Glassell


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Susan Swan : ウィキペディア英語版
Susan Swan

Susan Swan (born 9 June 1945) is a Canadian author. Born in Midland, Ontario, she studied at McGill University. Her list of works includes ''The Western Light'' (2012),''The Wives of Bath'' (1993), and ''What Casanova Told Me'' (2004). ''The Wives of Bath'' was made into the film ''Lost and Delirious'' in 2001, starring Piper Perabo, Jessica Paré, and Mischa Barton. The film was listed in the official selection in the Sundance Film Festival.
Swan has participated in the Humber College Humber Writer's Circle at Lakeshore Campus. Susan Swan also taught at York University and retired from there in 2007 to concentrate on her writing. She was Chair of The Writers' Union of Canada for 2007–2008.
==Life==
Swan grew up in Midland, Ontario, and has a younger brother John. Swan was a bookworm as a child and wrote stories to entertain herself and her friends. An early short story by Swan was deemed plagiarism by her Grade Seven teacher who said the writing was too good to have been written by a young girl. Swan's parents were Jane Cowan of Sarnia, Ontario, and Dr. Churchill Swan, a Midland G.P.
Swan attended Midland Public School and as a teenager, she worked as a reporter on the Midland Free Press. From 1959 to 1963, she was a boarder at Toronto's Havergal College, which inspired one of her novels. Swan has a general B.A. from McGill University (1964–67) where she worked on The McGill Daily. Swan was also editor of The McGill Scene, a newspaper for Montreal high school students that was banned under Swan's editorship. Swan later worked as a reporter for several Toronto daily newspapers before turning to magazine freelance and novel writing.
On 27 March 1969 she married Barry Haywood in the boardroom of The Telegram, where Swan was the education reporter. They had one daughter, Samantha (1973–) and the two were later divorced. Swan's longtime partner is Canadian publisher Patrick Crean.

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