Times Colonist

Ontario book award shortlist revealed

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TORONTO — Stories about a lowincome Toronto neighbourh­ood and a dystopian future seen through the eyes of an Indigenous teenager are among the six books shortliste­d on Thursday for the 2018 Trillium Book Award.

They join three English poetry titles as finalists for the awards celebratin­g Ontario-based writers.

In the book category, Cherie Dimaline’s The Marrow Thieves (DCB/Cormorant Books) is among the contenders for her creation of a future world where Indigenous peoples are hunted for their bone marrow. The story follows a 15year-old who joins his friends in a struggle to reconnect with their families.

Dimaline received the Governor General’s Literary Award for English young people’s literature for the title last year.

Catherine Hernandez’s Scarboroug­h (Arsenal Pulp Press) is also shortliste­d. The book follows three children facing poverty, troubled families and a system that consistent­ly falls short on the outskirts of Toronto.

Other authors in the book category include Kyo Maclear for Birds Art Life (Doubleday Canada) and James Maskalyk’s Life on the Ground Floor (Doubleday Canada).

Rounding out the short list are Rebecca Rosenblum for So Much Love (McClelland & Stewart) and Leanne Betasamosa­ke Simpson’s This Accident of Being Lost (House of Anansi Press).

English-language poetry finalists are Pino Coluccio for Class Clown (Biblioasis), Puneet Dutt for The Better Monsters (Mansfield Press) and Phoebe Wang’s Admission Requiremen­ts (McClelland & Stewart). The poetry award is given to literary achievemen­t for a first, second or third published work.

This year’s winners will be announced in Toronto on June 21.

Recipients of the Trillium Book Award receive $20,000, and their respective publishers receive $2,500 to promote the winning titles. All finalists receive a $500 honorarium.

Poetry and French-language children’s literature winners each receive $10,000, and their publisher $2,000 for promotion of the titles. Finalists for these awards also receive a $500 honorarium.

Previous winners have included Margaret Atwood, Michael Ondaatje and Nobel Prize winner Alice Munro.

 ??  ?? The Marrow Thieves, by Cherie Dimaline, has been short-listed for a Trillium Award.
The Marrow Thieves, by Cherie Dimaline, has been short-listed for a Trillium Award.

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