The Governor General’s Literary Awards were announced yesterday. M.G. Vassanji won for his memoir A Place Within: Rediscovering India. Kate Pullinger, who grew up in Canada and now lives in the U.K., won for her Victorian-era novel The Mistress of Nothing. Kevin Loring won for his first ever play, Where the Blood Mixes (he’s also an accomplished actor). North Vancouver poet David Zieroth won for The Fly in Autumn.
Laidlaw Library has purchased all these books; here are links to the library catalogue:
Categories: Literary Awards
Fifth Estate host Linden MacIntyre has won the Giller Prize for his novel
The Bishop’s Man!
Set in Cape Breton, the novel deals with the timely issue of sexual abuse by priests and coverups by the church hierarchy. Here’s a
review of the book from Quill & Quire.
Categories: Literary Awards
If you’re looking for some entertaining reading, I recommend The Sweetness at the Bottom of the Pie. It’s about an eleven-year-old girl who sets out to solve a murder that’s taken place in the garden of her family’s estate, in 1950s rural England. This brilliant, spunky girl is always a few steps ahead of the police.
I love hearing about people accomplishing new things when they’re “no spring chicken,” and that’s the case with 70-year-old Canadian author Alan Bradley — this is his first novel! What’s more, he set it in England, a place he had never visited until he won the Debut Dagger award for an early draft of this book, and the Crime Writers’ Association invited him over to receive his award.
Categories: Literary Awards · New Books
I recently put up a display of award-winning books that are available at Laidlaw Library. I put a photo of the display in Flickr and added “notes” and links. So if you mouse over a book cover, you can see what award it won, and you can get a link to our catalogue to find out more about the book and where to find it. (Thanks to Clemens & Alcuin Libraries, from whom I borrowed this idea.)
Categories: Literary Awards
Joseph Boyden won the Giller Prize on Monday for his novel Through Black Spruce. I thought it was a nice coincidence that he won it on Remembrance Day, since his previous novel, the bestselling Three Day Road, is about a First Nations soldier returning home from World War I.
Categories: Literary Awards
It’s unusual for a poetry book to win the annual Toronto Book Award, but last week Glenn Downie’s Loyalty Management did just that. The award is for books that are “evocative of Toronto.” The other nominees were:
All these books can be borrowed from Laidlaw Library.
Categories: Literary Awards · New Books
Indian author Aravind Adiga won the Booker prize on Tuesday for The White Tiger – his first novel! The Laidlaw Library copy has just been catalogued and will be ready for loan next week.
The other shortlisted books were The Secret Scripture by Sebastian Barry, Sea of Poppies by Amitav Ghosh, The Clothes on Their Backs by Linda Grant, and The Northern Clemency by Philip Hensher.
Categories: Literary Awards · New Books