Audrey Thomas (born November 17, 1935, Binghamton, New York, U.S.) is an American-born Canadian author known for her autobiographical novels, short stories, and radio plays.
Thomas graduated from Smith College, Northampton, Massachusetts, in 1957 and settled in Canada in 1959. After receiving an M.A. from the University of British Columbia in 1963, she lived in Ghana from 1964 to 1966 and then returned to British Columbia, where she divided her time between Vancouver and Galiano Island.
Thomas wrote about domestic life, women’s search for independence, and conflicts between men and women. She often threw her characters’ inner conflicts into relief by transplanting them to foreign lands. Thomas’s experimental style involved incorporating into her works wordplay and fragments of popular culture, including cartoons, nursery rhymes, and advertisements.
The stories of Ten Green Bottles (1967) are told by an unhappy female narrator of varying circumstances but consistent character. Thomas’s alter ego Isobel Cleary narrates the novels Mrs. Blood (1970), Songs My Mother Taught Me (1973), based on Thomas’s childhood memories, and Blown Figures (1974), set in Ghana and using Africa as a metaphor for the unconscious. The novels Latakia (1979) and Intertidal Life (1984) both concern a woman writer adjusting to the end of a romantic relationship.
Thomas’s later works include the story collections Goodbye Harold, Good Luck (1986), The Wild Blue Yonder (1990), and The Path of Totality (2001). She also wrote the novels Graven Images (1993); Coming Down from Wa (1995), about a young art history student’s spiritual journey to West Africa; Isobel Gunn (1999), a fictional account of the woman who disguised herself as a man to work for Hudson’s Bay Company in the 1800s; and Local Customs (2014), which was inspired by the mysterious death of Letty Landon, a writer who died in 1838 shortly after marrying and traveling to Africa.