Eden Robinson, writer (born 19 January 1968 in Kitimaat, BC). A well-known Haisla and Heiltsuk writer, Eden Robinson has won national and international acclaim for works of fiction. In addition to the numerous awards her books have received or for which they have been nominated, Robinson has also received an honorary doctoral degree from the University of British Columbia and an Indspire Award.

Early Life and Education
Eden Robinson was born in Kitimat General Hospital and raised in Kitamaat Village. Kitimaat Village is home to members of the Haisla Nation. Her mother, who is Heiltsuk, met her father, a Haisla man, at a fishing stop in Bella Bella, the traditional home of the Heiltsuk First Nation. The two raised their family, including Robinson and her older brother and younger sister (who went on to become a television news anchor at the CBC), in Haisla.
Robinson earned a Bachelor of Fine Arts at the University of Victoria . Her first published story, “Traplines” (1991), was published in the literary magazine Prism International while she was in her last year of university. After graduating in 1992, Robinson moved to Vancouver with ambitions to become a writer. She worked a number of odds jobs — janitor, napkin ironer, dry cleaner, mailroom clerk — that allowed her to dedicate time to her literary craft. Encouraged by the early success of “Traplines,” she enrolled — and eventually graduated from — the prestigious master’s program in creative writing at the University of British Columbia.
Writing Career
Eden Robinson’s first book, Traplines (1996), is a collection of three short stories and a novella (a short novel). Robinson’s young narrators recount haunting tales of their disturbing relationships with sociopaths and psychopaths. The collection won Britain’s Winifred Holtby Memorial Prize for the best regional work by a Commonwealth writer.

Monkey Beach (2000), Robinson’s first novel, is set in Kitamaat. The novel follows a teenage girl’s search for answers to and understanding of her younger brother’s disappearance at sea. The book is both a mystery and a spiritual journey, combining contemporary realism with Haisla spirituality (see also Religion and Spirituality of Indigenous Peoples in Canada). Monkey Beach was praised nationally and internationally as the work of a powerful and original new literary voice. It was shortlisted for the Giller Prize and the Governor General’s Literary Award, and it won the Ethel Wilson Fiction Prize.
Robinson returned to the characters and urban terrain of her novella “Contact Sports,” from Traplines, in her 2006 novel Blood Sports. Set five years after the original story, the protagonist, Tom, is still struggling to make a life for himself and his young family. In addition to the socio-economic challenges of Vancouver’s Downtown Eastside, Tom once again faces peril from his sociopathic cousin Jeremy, who takes sadistic pleasure in ruining his life. Reviewers praised Robinson’s unflinching and compelling exploration of the darkest impulses of humanity.
In 2011, Robinson released The Sasquatch at Home: Traditional Protocols & Modern Storytelling (see Sasquatch). Part of the Henry Kreisel Memorial Lecture Series, The Sasquatch at Home provides insight into Robinson’s culture, early life and family. The University of Alberta Press described the stories in the book as “delightful, poignant” and “sometimes quirky.”
In 2017, Robinson released Son of A Trickster , the first instalment of a trilogy. Son of a Trickster is a darkly comic coming of age story that follows the life of 16-year-old Jared Martin as he navigates his way through the violent, dysfunctional world of small-town British Columbia. The book was praised in the Globe and Mail for the “inordinate amount of glee” it takes “in cramming together traditional narratives with contemporary tales of violence and survival.” It was shortlisted for the 2017 Giller Prize. The second novel in the trilogy, Trickster Drift, was released in 2018. Trickster Drift also received praise and won the 2019 Ethel Wilson Fiction Prize. The final instalment in the series, Return of the Trickster, was released in 2021.

In 2020, Son of a Trickster was a finalist in the Canada Reads competition. It was championed by Kaniehtiio Horn.
Awards and Honours
- Ethel Wilson Fiction Prize (Monkey Beach) (2001)
- University of Victoria’s Distinguished Alumni Award (2001)
- Writers’ Trust Engel/Findley Award (2016)
- Writers' Trust Fellowship (2017)
- Honorary Doctoral Degree – University of British Columbia (2018)
- Ethel Wilson Fiction Prize (Trickster Drift) (2019)
- Indspire Award (Arts) (2024)
Published Works
- Traplines (1996)
- Monkey Beach (2000)
- Blood Sports (2006)
- Sasquatch at Home: Traditional Protocols & Modern Storytelling (2011)
- Son of a Trickster (2017)
- Trickster Drift (2018)
- Return of the Trickster (2021)
Significance
Eden Robinson is one of the most prominent living female Indigenous writers in Canada. Her stories and novels are highly entertaining, gritty and original literary works that probe significant issues facing contemporary Indigenous life in Canada: the enduring tragedy of residential schools, inter-generational violence and the destruction of traditional lifestyles and land brought on by industrial development (see Indigenous Territory). Robinson has spoken publicly about many contentious Indigenous concerns, such as the lack of subsidized housing for the urban population and the high levels of pollution caused by the aluminum plant near Kitimaat. Robinson is one of the most exciting, talented and fearless writers of her generation. “My process for writing a book is similar to planet accretion,” she said in a 2014 interview with Nineteen Questions, a project of the University of British Columbia Creative Writing Program. “I have to have a certain mass of ideas before the assorted bits of dust and rocks collapse into themselves and start to spin. If it sounds messy, that’s probably because it is.”