Marie Moser
Marie Moser is a Canadian novelist and short-story writer residing in Edmonton, Alberta.
Moser is best known for her 1987 novel Counterpoint, which won her the eighth New Alberta Novel Competition in 1986, and a prize of $4,000 given by Alberta Culture and Irwin Publishers. Although it was originally published in English, it has since been published in two editions in the French language . Counterpoint is a story of three generations of French Canadian women and the manner in which their lives interweave in imperceptible and yet intrinsic ways. Despite winning an award, Counterpoint also received a negative review in the Toronto Star, which said that Moser's first novel lacked "narrative skill".
Moser's short stories have been published in a wide array of collections, magazines, and compendiums, and some have been broadcast on the radio.