A Colorado native, Carolyn Kremers wanted to live in the Alaskan bush. She accepted an invitation to teach music and English at a school in a remote Yup'ik Eskimo village on Nelson Island, in Western Alaska on the Bering Sea. After teaching for two years in the village of Tununak, she moved to Alaska's Interior, and today she teaches writing and literature part-time at the Universityof Alaska Fairbanks.
Kremers earned undergraduate degrees in English and honors humanities from Stanford Universityand in flute performance from Metropolitan State College in Denver, Colorado. She completed her teaching credential at the Universityof Illinois Chicago, and she holds an MFA in creative writing from the Universityof Alaska Fairbanks.
Early in her career, Kremers received a special citation from the PEN/Jerard Fund Award for emerging women writers of nonfiction. Since then, her essays and poems have appeared on public radio, on the Internet, and in numerous journals, magazines, and anthologies. In 2008-09, she was a Fulbright Scholar in Ulan Ude, Russia. She lives in a log cabin in a birch forest outside Fairbanks.