

Her books accurately depict these locales in different eras. In 1956, she and her husband bought their own home on Meldazy Drive in a beautiful new subdivision in Scarborough, when McCowan was a gravel road and north of Ellesmere was farmland. Her husband was transferred to Peterborough, so they moved to Millbrook when her children were young. As a new bride, she lived on Gladstone Avenue in Toronto. She attended Runnymede Collegiate, but didn't graduate because the war started and she went to work (depicted in The Girls They Left Behind). The "new house" was on Cornell Avenue and she went to Birchcliff Public School, but most of her childhood and teens were spent on Lavinia, which is why Swansea claims her for their own. (Despite the hardships of poverty, it was her nature to be happy, so the books are upbeat.) They lived in Birchcliff and Swansea. The Booky Trilogy, set during the Great Depression, depicts her family being forced to stay ahead of the bailiff, who threw them out when her unemployed father couldn't afford the rent. She struggled in school because they moved so often. No Greats.īernice was the middle child of 5 children (Wilma, Gordon, Bernice, Jack and Robert). She married her high school sweetheart, Lloyd Hunter, and had two children, Anita and Heather, and four grandchildren, Meredith, Lisa, Hunter and Franceline.


She was born in Toronto, Ontario, on Novemand died May 29, 2002.
