Born in the coastal BC town of Powell River, Sheila Peters moved inland to the mountains near Smithers in northwestern BC over 40 years ago. She married and raised two sons while working as a journalist, weaver, college instructor, environmental and human rights activist. She and her husband have recently returned to live in Powell River.
Her work has appeared in several Canadian literary journals, including Event, Prairie Fire, Grain, The Malahat Review, and Descant.
Creekstone Press published her first book, Canyon Creek: A Script in 1998 and Beach Holme Press in Vancouver published Tending the Remnant Damage, a collection of linked short stories, in 2001. The weather from the west came out in 2007 and The Taste of Ashes, a novel, was published by Caitlin Press in 2012. Shafted: A Mystery was published by Creekstone Press in 2015. The Bathymetry of Lax Kwaxl, a collection of sonnets built around a kayak trip to islands off the coast from Prince Rupert, was published by Leaf Press in 2016.
Her writing has also been published in several anthologies including Rocksalt (Mothertongue) and Unfurled (Caitlin). Her blog, Say the Names, collects stories and essays around the resistance to the Enbridge Northern Gateway Pipeline proposal.
Sheila is a member of The Writers Union of Canada.
As a member of TWUC, she is eligible for funding from its National Public Readings Program as well as other Canada Council funded readings and residencies.