Showing posts with label single author journals. Show all posts
Showing posts with label single author journals. Show all posts

Monday, 17 February 2025

Two Lists of Single Author Journals

They Are Difficult to Find

I have rambled on about single author periodicals in many posts and this will be the fourth in a row about that subject. It will be the last one. My few readers will be relieved, but should any accidental visitor stumble upon them, I am sure they will be useful. I say "sure" because finding them is difficult.
To demonstrate the difficulty in finding single author journals as a category (i.e. all of them) I will present first, the result I found after conducting another search for them. Given that the words "author(s)" and "journal(s)" yield a large number of unrelated "hits" one might find the following single author journals listed in Wikipedia, under: "List of Academic Journals About Specific Authors." I will say right away that not all such journals are "academic" and, to indicate that the list is hundreds of titles short of being complete, I provide a list of single author journals published currently by just one university press. It is still the case that the best reference source is an old one and it remains the starting point for any future researcher: Author Newsletters and Journals : An International Annotated Bibliography of Serial Publications Concerned With the Life and Works of Individual Authors, by Margaret C. Patterson.
Before the lists, here are some brief remarks which, along with my other posts, may be useful for anyone who chooses to work on this subject or look for these periodicals.
-That there is an academic industry devoted to single intellectuals/authors should not be surprising. There are also many periodicals devoted to popular authors.
- There are entire courses dedicated to one author and there are conferences held on their behalf, but some writers are seen to merit more attention and given it in serial publications.
- Retiring academics are sometimes honoured by a Festschrift so single author journals can be regarded as simply continually published Festschriften. - Not all single author journals are about single authors. Some include others who are in some way closely related. - One is likely find them mentioned only in bibliographies or when a new one comes along and an advertisement is produced in a publication such as the TLS. I spotted one a while back about The Journal of the Sylvia Townsend Warner Society and I learned recently that the Arnold Bennett Society publishes a 40+ page newsletter three times a year. They often appear on lists when they die.
- The market for such serials is small and even university libraries will usually have only those devoted to major figures (Shakespeare) or those demanded by a zealous faculty member.
- And again to demonstrate how hard they are to locate, there is no way to find out how many of these journals your favourite university library has.
The Internet is likely to result in a decline in the number of single author journals in printed form. There is, however, unlikely to be a decrease in the number of individuals who remain dedicated to their own favourite author.

         LIST OF ACADEMIC JOURNALS ABOUT SPECIFIC AUTHORS
   This list is found in Wikipedia along with this brief statement: "
The following is a list of notable academic journals and magazines that are devoted to the study of specific authors and philosophers. Some of the journals are not currently active."
   Links are provided in some cases and some go to an entry for the journal in Wikipedia. There are more than 66 since some authors rate more than one journal, e.g., Dickens(3) Hegel(3), Shakespeare(3). The subjects range from, fiction, politics (Lincoln), and religion to philosophy and the geographic coverage is broad, e.g. C.L.R. James (Trinidad). Women are included: Cather, Dickinson, Rand, and some journals are about more than one author, e..g the Brontes and The Inklings. The Acorn, is listed next to Gandhi and King "since it explores philosophical issues related to non-violence in theory and practice, with a focus on the work of M. K. Gandhi and Martin Luther King, Jr." Fitzgerald and Hemingway also share a journal. 
Although these people have their own journal, I am willing to bet there are names you will not recognize. That the list is only a partial one is illustrated by the next list which is from just one press.

  1. Hannah Arendt. Arendt Studies

  2. Aristotle. Proceedings of the Aristotelian Society

  3. Augustine of Hippo. Augustinian Studies; Augustinianum

  4. Jane Austen. Persuasions; Jane Austen Annual

  5. Samuel Beckett. Journal of Beckett Studies; Samuel Beckett Today

  6. George Berkeley. Berkeley Studies

  7. Brontë family. Brontë Studies

  8. Willa Cather. Willa Cather Newsletter & Review

  9. Gilbert Keith Chesterton. The Chesterton Review

  10. Joseph Conrad. The Conradian

  11. Gilles Deleuze. Deleuze and Guattari Studies

  12. Jacques Derrida. Derrida Today

  13. Charles Dickens. Dickens Quarterly; Dickens Studies Annual; The Dickensian

  14. James Dickey. James Dickey Review

  15. Emily Dickinson. The Emily Dickinson Journal

  16. Arthur Conan Doyle. The Baker Street Journal

  17. T. S. Eliot. T. S. Eliot Studies Annual

  18. Philip José Farmer. Farmerphile: The Magazine of Philip José Farmer

  19. William Faulkner. The Faulkner Journal

  20. F. Scott Fitzgerald. The F. Scott Fitzgerald Review; Fitzgerald/Hemingway Annual

  21. Theodor Fontane. Fontane Blätter

  22. Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi. The Acorn

  23. Robert Graves. Gravesiana

  24. Graham Greene.Graham Greene Studies

  25. Félix Guattari. Deleuze and Guattari Studies

  26. H. Rider Haggard. Haggard Journal

  27. Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel. Hegel Bulletin; Hegel-Jahrbuch; The Owl of Minerva

  28. Martin Heidegger. Heidegger Studies

  29. Ernest Hemingway. Hemingway Review; Fitzgerald/Hemingway Annual

  30. David Hume. Hume Studies

  31. Edmund Husserl. Husserl Studies

  32. The Inklings. Journal of Inklings Studies; VII: Journal of the Marion E. Wade Center; Mythlore [not about an individual, but an Oxford discussion group.]

  33. C. L. R. James. The CLR James Journal

  34. Henry James. The Henry James Review

  35. Ben Jonson Ben. Jonson Journal

  36. James Joyce. James Joyce Quarterly

  37. Franz Kafka. Journal of the Kafka Society of America

  38. Immanuel Kant. Kant Yearbook; Kant-Studien; Kantian Review

  39. Søren Kierkegaard. Kierkegaard Studies Yearbook; Kierkegaard Studies Monograph Series

  40. D. H. Lawrence. D. H. Lawrence Review

  41. Martin Luther King Jr. The Acorn

  42. Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz. The Leibniz Review; Studia Leibnitiana

  43. Emmanuel Levinas. Levinas Studies

  44. C. S. Lewis. Sehnsucht: The C. S. Lewis Journal; VII: Journal of the Marion E. Wade Center.

  45. Abraham Lincoln. The Journal of the Abraham Lincoln Association

  46. Bernard Lonergan. The Lonergan Review

  47. Pierre Loti. Bulletin de l'Association internationale des amis de Pierre Loti

  48. Thomas Mann. Thomas Mann Jahrbuch (in German)

  49. Cormac McCarthy. The Cormac McCarthy Journal

  50. Herman Melville. Leviathan

  51. Maurice Merleau-Ponty. Chiasmi International

  52. Vladimir Nabokov. Nabokov Studies

  53. Friedrich Nietzsche. New Nietzsche Studies; The Journal of Nietzsche Studies

  54. Paul the Apostle. Pauline Studies; Journal for the Study of Paul and His Letters

  55. Edgar Allan Poe. Poe Studies: History, Theory, Interpretation

  56. Marcel Proust. Marcel Proust Bulletin

  57. Ayn Rand. The Journal of Ayn Rand Studies

  58. Philip Roth. Philip Roth Studies

  59. Jean-Paul Sartre. Sartre Studies International

  60. William Shakespeare. Shakespeare Bulletin; Shakespeare Quarterly; The Shakespeare Yearbook

  61. George Bernard Shaw. SHAW: The Annual of Bernard Shaw Studies

  62. Wallace Stevens. The Wallace Stevens Journal

  63. J. R. R. Tolkien. Tolkien Studies; Journal of Tolkien Research; Mallorn; VII: Journal of the Marion E. Wade Center; Quettar

  64. Giambattista Vico. New Vico Studies

  65. Virginia Woolf. Virginia Woolf Bulletin

66. Slavoj Žižek. International Journal of Žižek Studies

LIST OF SINGLE AUTHOR JOURNALS FROM PENN STATE UNIVERSITY PRESS This list was constructed from the journals listed at PSU Press in 2025. There is no category for these single author journals. I simply took the ones I identified on the list of PSU journals. Other journals in this category would be found at other university press websites. For example, the University of Chicago Press publishes, Spencer Studies and The Wordsworth Circle.
  1. The Arthur Miller Journal
  2. Bishop–Lowell Studies
  3. The Chaucer Review: A Journal of Medieval Studies and Literary Criticism
  4. The Cormac McCarthy Journal
  5. Dickens Studies Annual: Essays on Victorian Fiction
  6. The Edgar Allan Poe Review
  7. Edith Wharton Review
  8. The Eugene O'Neill Review
  9. The F. Scott Fitzgerald Review
  10. George Eliot—George Henry Lewes Studies
  11. The Harold Pinter Review: Essays on Contemporary Drama
  12. The Langston Hughes Review
  13. The Mark Twain Annual
  14. Milton Studies
  15. Nathaniel Hawthorne Review
  16. SHAW: The Journal of Bernard Shaw Studies
  17. Steinbeck Review
  18. The Scriblerian and the Kit-Cats [about more than one author.]
  19. Thornton Wilder Journal
  20. Wesley and Methodist Studies
  21. William Carlos Williams Review     
   If you are interested in the class of single author journals, Patterson's
Author Newsletters and Journals : An International Annotated Bibliography of Serial Publications Concerned With the Life and Works of Individual Authors, is still the place to begin. If you want to take on a large research project to update that work, you will have a lot of work to do. Some of the other related posts in MM will be useful and since this is my last mention of this subject, here is one short piece I was unable to examine: "One Man's Meat: Societies and Journals Devoted to a Single Author," William White, American Book Collector, 1957, 8(3), p.22. 
  To use a word that may be found in one of Zane Grey's books, or journals about him, I will now say adios to this subject. 

Sunday, 16 February 2025

The Journal of Schenkerian Studies

 Little Journal ----Large Issues

   I have devoted several posts to the subject of journals which are basically about one person. That person is usually an author, but in this case the periodical is about the Austrian music theorist Heinrich Schenker who was also an author. The number of subscribers to it is much smaller than the number of words in this post which I hope to keep very short.
   I should, because I know even less about classical music than I do about a very large number of other subjects about which I know little. Plus, I can't read music or German and the title of this journal scares me as much as the word "calculus." I understand enough, however, to know that even a little magazine can get into big trouble, if it is located on a campus and the subject of race arises.
   The Journal of Schenkerian Studies is published at the Center for Schenkerian Studies at the University of North Texas. The Center is headed by Professor Timothy Jackson, a tenured professor of music theory. 
    Across the country at Hunter College there is a Professor Ewell, also a music professor, but a Black one, a colour that should be mentioned in this case. In 2019, he travelled to Columbus and addressed the Society for Music Theory. The title of the talk was "Music Theory's White Racial Frame" and apparently one doesn't have to know much about music theory to understand the major points made, that Schenker was a racist, a fact ignored by the Schenkerians, and that, to put it bluntly, classical music was too white.  Apparently he received a standing ovation, which is a rather rare thing at an academic conference. 
   This news reached Texas and it is fair to say Professor Jackson did not agree. He then did what should be done when such academic arguments develop -- issue a call for papers to debate the issue. Articles discussing the Ewell arguments were returned and published in The Journal of Schenkerian Studies. Some agreed with Professor Ewell and some did not. Professor Jackson did not. Apart from the Black/white arguments, there were some into which anti-semitism was injected to further complicate the attempt at discourse.(Schenker, who was Jewish, died in 1935 and his wife died ten years later in Theresienstadt.)
   The news generated about this polemical essay in a very small academic periodical, was considerable. It came to the attention of the graduate students in Texas as did the word "race" and, probably without reading the papers, many decided that even a tenured professor should be fired it he was a racist. Others piled on and there was a demand that he be terminated.
   Naturally the news was a nuisance for those in the administrative  wing at North Texas and, not surprisingly, Professor Jackson was removed as editor and generally ostracized from departmental matters. 
   Once again, Professor Jackson did not agree, feeling perhaps that he had been treated shoddily, and sued the UNT regents and others who had defamed him and violated his right to speak freely. The regents appealed, but a Texas Court of Appeals ruled in favour of Professor Jackson and the litigation continues. 
   To keep this short, this episode can be characterized simply as another cannon shot at another canon that is a construct of a different group of DWEMS - DWEMusicians. It illustrates that even a little academic single author journal with limited circulation can have a big impact. 

Sources: 
   
For most, all of the information you will want can be found freely in the Wikipedia entries for Heinrich Schenker or the one for The Journal of Schenkerian Studies. To visit the scene of the crime, go to the UNT School of Music and the Division of Music History, Theory and Ethnomusicology where the Journal of Schenkerian Studies still exists, apparently in a suspended state.
   If you are willing to pay, start here: "
Obscure Musicology Journal Sparks Battles Over Race and Free Speech: A scholar’s address about racism and music theory was met with a vituperative, personal response by a small journal. It faced calls to cease publishing," Michael Powell, NYT, Feb. 14, 2021. 
"A periodical devoted to the study of a long-dead European music theorist is an unlikely suspect to spark an explosive battle over race and free speech."

The Bonus: 
Professor Ewell's views are expressed in his recently published book which is available up at Western in the Music Library. Here is a description:
On Music Theory: And Making Music More Welcoming For Everyone.
"Since its inception in the mid-twentieth century, American music theory has been framed and taught almost exclusively by white men. As a result, whiteness and maleness are woven into the fabric of the field, and BIPOC music theorists face enormous hurdles due to their racial identities. In On Music Theory, Philip Ewell brings together autobiography, music theory and history, and theory and history of race in the United States to offer a black perspective on the state of music theory and to confront the field's white supremacist roots. Over the course of the book, Ewell undertakes a textbook analysis to unpack the mythologies of whiteness and western-ness with respect to music theory, and gives, for the first time, his perspective on the controversy surrounding the publication of volume 12 of the Journal of Schenkerian Studies. He speaks directly about the antiblackness of music theory and the antisemitism of classical music writ large and concludes by offering suggestions about how we move forward. Taking an explicitly antiracist approach to music theory, with this book Ewell begins to create a space in which those who have been marginalized in music theory can thrive." -- Back cover.

Saturday, 15 February 2025

CANADIAN Single Author Journals

  This is a bibliographical research note for those with a specific interest in single author journals. You will know who you are and what they are. Even more specifically, it is for those who are wondering if there are any Canadian single author journals. The word “Canadian” will be employed in this context to attempt to answer two questions: 1) are there any single author journals devoted to Canadians?, and 2) are there Canadians who are, or were, producing single author journals about people who are not Canadian?  The answer to both questions is “Yes." Those answers are not easily found, so this note will be useful for the very small number who are wondering what Canadian might be worthy of such a journal. It will also be of interest to the even smaller number who wonder what  non-Canadian is important enough to rate such attention from someone here in Canada.    It is very difficult to identify those individuals who have their very own periodical, unless you are willing to look up every single person you think might be important enough to have a journal, produced and printed over a period of time on their behalf. Identification of all of the single author journals was problematic before the Internet and remains so. Before the Internet, one very dedicated and diligent researcher rounded up all the single author journals she could find back in 1979. Over 1000 of them are listed and described in Margaret Patterson’s, Author Newsletter and Journals: An International Bibliography of Serial Publications Concerned With the Life and Works of Individual Authors. A few supplements were published by the author in Serials Review, but otherwise, there have been no other reference books about this subject.  Her book is well-indexed and from one of them I provide below, all of the entries that are “Canadian.” There are only a few and some relate to journals that are about Canadians, and the others about journals produced by Canadians or in Canada. Two of them are still being published, but the authors who are the subjects of these single author journals are not Canadian. The Chesterton Review was started in Saskatchewan and continues on at Seton Hall in New Jersey. Hume Studies began at the University of Western Ontario and the Humeans are still very active down the road at Brock University and elsewhere.   After the Internet one might have assumed that single author journals ceased to exist. It would seem to be far easier and less expensive to set up a website dedicated to the author, or publish an e-journal related to that individual. The two examples provided above indicate, however, that single author journals continue to exist, along with websites devoted to them. Finding them though is as difficult as it always was.  Provided below are two lists. The first one contains all of the references related to Canada that are found in Patterson’s, Author Newsletter and Journals. The second provides the search results found when attempting to identify Canadian single author journals on the Internet.


Stephen Leacock


1. CANADIAN SINGLE AUTHOR JOURNALS FOUND IN PATTERSON'S AUTHOR NEWSLETTERS AND JOURNALS Patterson’s book may not be readily available so I have included the information provided with each reference and the page number on which it is found in Author Newsletters and Journals. 


1. Bakhtin, Mikhail (1895-1975)

Bakhtin Newsletter (Le Bulletin Bakhtine)
Editor: Clive Thomson, French Department, Queen’s University
“Designed to facilitate communication among scholars interested in Bakhtin. The first issue included an analytical bibliography and news of past publications, current projects and future conferences.”
This reference is the only one not found in Author Newsletters… This one is from  the “Supplements” Patterson did in Serials Review. See this issue: Spring, 1984, p. 51.
This newsletter appears to have been published between 1983-1996. Additional information will be found at Queen’s. Western University has some issues in storage. 


2. Chesterton, G.K. (1874 -1936)

The Chesterton Review

In 2025, The Chesterton Review is still being published by the G.K.Chesterton Institute For Faith & Culture at Seton Hall University. Information about it is available at this website: https://www.shu.edu/chesterton/chesterton-review.html

   It is included on this list because it was established  in 1974 in the English Department at St. Thomas More College, University of Saskatchewan. The title was: Chesterton Review: The Journal of the Chesterton Society. Here is the information provided by Patterson, p.62.

   Chesterton Review: The Journal of the Chesterton Society. Editor: Ian Boyd, Department of English, St. Thomas More College, University of Saskatchewan, 1437 College Drive, Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, S7NOW6, Canada. Sponsor: The Chesterton Society. Fall/Winter 1974—. 2yr. $5(Canadians); $6(non-Canadians); $7(Institutions); $8(non-Canadian Institutions); £2 (Great Britain). [50-150p.] Circulation: 1,263, including 376 outside North America. Last issue examined: vol.4, 1978.

   “Concerned with “the promotion of a critical interest in all aspects of the life and works of G.K. Chesterton.” Critical and biographical studies on sources, influences, comparisons, style; review articles; previously unpublished works; reprints of inaccessible early works; surveys of Chesterton’s popularity and influence in foreign lands; extensive news and comments concerning national and International Chesterton Society meetings and financial status, seminars in North American and foreign countries, work in progress, new publications; reminiscences; brief notes: letters to the editor; bibliographies; poems; International contributors; annual index. The Chesterton Society has branch secretaries in England, Australia, Canada, France, Japan, Poland and the United States.”

Indexed by: America History and Life and Historical Abstracts.

Alternate subtitle: Newsletter of the G.K. Chesterton Society, Fall-Winter 1974.

P.62.


3. Choquette, Robert (1905 - 1991)

Cahiers Du Cercle Robert Choquette.

Sponsor and publisher:  Collège de Saint-Laurent 

1956-64 (nos.1-9). Irregular. [40-65 p.]

American-born Canadian poet, novelist, dramatist.

“Dedicated to Choquette, a graduate of the Collège de Saint-Laurent. Composed mainly of poems to Choquette’s honor, with a few essays and stories; brief introductions.” p.63

Choquette was also a diplomat. He was born in Manchester, New Hampshire.


Dantin, Louis - see Seers, Eugène below.


4.Hume, David (1711-76)

   In 2025, Hume Studies is still being published and information about it is available at this website: https://www.humesociety.org/ojs/index.php/hs/index.

  It is included on this list because it was established at the University of Western Ontario in 1975.

“Scottish philosopher, historian.”

Hume Studies. Editor: John W. Davis, Department of Philosophy, Talbot College, University of Western Ontario, London, Ontario, N6A3K7, Canada. Sponsor: Faculty of Arts, University of Western Ontario, 1975—. 2/yr (April, November). $3.50 (individuals); $5.50 (institutions). [30-50 p.]. Last issue examined: vol.4, 1978.

“Devoted to historical and systematic research on David Hume. Long documented essays on Hume’s work; brief comments on his contemporaries, his influence, letters, manuscripts, and life; Hume bibliographies; notes and news on workshops of the Canadian Society of Eighteenth Studies and other research projects; notes on symposia, projected works; book reviews; announcements of books received. In English, French, German or Italian. Back issues available from Micromedia Limited, Box 34, Station 5, Toronto, Ontario, M5M4L6, Canada. 

[Note: The information immediately above is outdated. Current information and back issues are available from the Hume Society at the website provided at the top of this entry.]

Indexed by: America: History and Life and Philosopher’s Index.

P.166.


5. Leacock, Stephen (1869-1944)

Newspacket. Sponsor: Stephen Leacock Associates. P.O. Box 854, Orillia, Ontario. 

Spring 1970 –. Quarterly.

“Canadian humorist, political scientist."

P.192.


6. Seers, Eugène [Louis Dantin] (1865-1945)

Cahiers Louis Dantin. 

Louis Dantin was the pen name of Eugène Seers. Canadian poet, critic.

Publisher: Editions du  Bien public, Trois-Rivières, Québec. 

1962- (?) Irregular. [60-160 p.] Last issue examined, no.4, 1967.

“Previously unpublished letters from Dantin to his son; personal reminiscences, genealogy of the Seers family, announcements of new editions, with notes and descriptions of Dantin’s works.” 

P.278.


2. SELECTED RESULTS OF SEARCHES FOR CANADIAN SINGLE AUTHOR JOURNALS ON THE INTERNET

  I know of no way to find such things. I simply chose some Canadian authors to search. I am not a Canadianist and the list will be deemed “idiosyncratic” by those looking for an author from a particular province, or one who wrote in a language other than English, or from a specific ‘identity’. 

  A cursory search was done and the result is the Baker’s dozen provided below. A few single author journals are found and you will locate examples quickly under the entries for Margaret Atwood and Lucy Maud Montgomery, from which one can, at least conclude  that single author journals are not only for males. When there is no entry next to the name searched, that means that there was nothing much to notice beyond the basic reference sources and Wikipedia. In a few cases, I have provided some information which may be of use if you want to start your own single author journal about that person.



1. Atwood, Margaret
https://atwoodsociety.org/
   "The Margaret Atwood Society is an international association of scholars, teachers, and students who share an interest in Atwood’s work. The main goal of the Society is to promote scholarly exchange of Atwood’s works and cultural contributions by providing opportunities for scholars to exchange information. To reach this goal, we publish a journal, Margaret Atwood Studies, for which we invite submissions year round, and we host several panels each year on Atwood at various academic conferences, including at the Modern Language Association Convention (MLA), Association of Canadian College and University Teachers of English (ACCUTE), and the Midwest Modern Language Association (MMLA)."

2. Callaghan, Morley

3. COHEN, Leonard
Official Website
https://www.leonardcohen.com/
 Produces - The Leonard Cohen Newsletter
   The Leonard Cohen Files
https://www.leonardcohenfiles.com/
"Welcome to The Leonard Cohen Files - a tribute to the music and poetry of the Canadian singer-songwriter-poet-novelist Leonard Cohen.
This website was launched in September 1995. The site is hosted by Jarkko Arjatsalo in Finland. The webmaster appreciates the continuous help and support provided by Leonard Cohen and his management."

4. DAVIES, Robertson
“Robertson Davies Collection” Queen’s University
https://web.archive.org/web/20100603151729/http://library.queensu.ca/robertsondavies
"Located on the historic campus of Queen's University in beautiful Kingston, Ontario, the W.D. Jordan Special Collections and Music Library houses the personal library of Robertson Davies, the renowned Canadian novelist, playwright, critic, journalist and professor.
The Collection
Comprised of more than 5000 volumes, theatre prints and ephemera, this remarkable collection reflects Davies' deep interests in literature, literary criticism, art, music, theatre, theatre criticism, theatre biography and autobiography, film, drama, history and psychology. Many of the volumes are annotated with handwritten notes inserted.  Particular strengths are in 18th, 19th and 20th century theatre books and prompt copies. Many works are signed or first editions. The items will be shelved according to room order in which they were kept at Windhover, Davies’ country home in Caledon Hills."

5. GRANT, George Parkin
6. Laurence, Margaret
7. McFarlane, Leslie

8. MacLennan, Hugh
  The Hugh MacLennan Papers Online Project McGill University Libraries
https://digital.library.mcgill.ca/maclennan/bio.htm

9. MCLUHAN, Marshall
Official website:
https://marshallmcluhan.com/
   Marshall McLuhan Bibliography at Monoskop
https://monoskop.org/Marshall_McLuhan
"Welcome to Monoskop, a wiki for arts and studies.
Monoskop is an independent web-based educational resource and research platform for arts, culture and humanities founded in 2004."

10. MITCHELL, W.O.
Website W.O.Mitchell Ltd.
https://womitchell.ca/

11. Montgomery, Lucy Maud
 Lucy Maud Montgomery Society of Ontario
https://lucymaudmontgomery.ca/
  L.M. (Lucy Maud) Montgomery Literary Society
https://lmmontgomeryliterarysociety.weebly.com/
The L. M. Montgomery Literary Society is an international community of readers with a special interest in the life of Canadian author Lucy Maud Montgomery (1874 – 1942), her first novel, Anne of Green Gables, as well as her many other novels, 500+ short stories, poetry, letters and personal journals.
The Shining Scroll is the annual publication of the L,MMNL,S.  
 L.M. Montgomery Institute
https://lmmontgomery.ca//
 For additional information see: The L.M. Montgomery Institute, University of Prince Edward Island. https://lmmontgomery.ca/islandora/object/lmmi%3Acollection
Journal of L.M. Montgomery Studies
https://journaloflmmontgomerystudies.ca/
   L.M. Montgomery Research Centre
https://web.archive.org/web/20090803190900/http://www.lmmrc.ca/
"The L.M. Montgomery Research Centre Web site is a scholarly resource designed to highlight the L.M. Montgomery Collection of the University of Guelph Library, making it visible and easily accessible to scholars and readers of Lucy Maud Montgomery."

12. RICHLER, Mordecai

13. Woodcock, George
Website:
https://web.archive.org/web/20130822150108/http://www.georgewoodcock.com/
"George Woodcock (1912-1995) has been variously described as "quite possibly the most civilized man in Canada,"  "Canada's Tolstoy," "by far Canada's most prolific writer," "a regional, national and international treasure" and "a kind of John Stuart Mill of dedication to intellectual excellence and the cause of human liberty." His unrivaled productivity as British Columbia's foremost man of letters was achieved in concert with consistent political ideals and humanitarian actions ever since he and Ingeborg Woodcock arrived in B.C. to build a cabin in 1949.

The Bonus: 
I usually provide one, so here it is. There was a single author journal called, The Curwood Collector. Although it is not about a Canadian and was not produced in Canada, it was published close by in Michigan and the popular author spent a lot of time in Canada, which he often wrote about and referred to as "God's Country." There is a festival every June in Owosso, Michigan to honour, James Oliver Curwood.