Windsor Star

‘A year of outliers’

Cusk, Robinson make long list for lucrative Scotiabank Giller Prize

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ST. JOHN’S, N.L. Rachel Cusk’s novel Transit and Eden Robinson’s Son of a Trickster are among the contenders for this year’s Scotiabank Giller Prize. Madeleine Thien, last year’s winner, announced the long list at a ceremony in St. John’s, N.L.

The prize awards $100,000 to the winner and $10,000 to the other finalists.

Transit (Harper Collins Publishers Ltd) and Son of a Trickster (Alfred A. Knopf Canada) were among 12 titles chosen from a field of 112 books.

The five-member jury described a collection that “gave the impression of a world in transition: searching inward as much as outward, wary but engaged.”

A short list will be announced Oct. 2 and the winner will be announced at a televised gala in Toronto on Nov. 20.

The jury panel included Canadian writers Anita Rau Badami, Andre Alexis and Lynn Coady, along with British writer Richard Beard and U.S. writer Nathan Englander.

“As with any year, there were trends, themes that ran through any number of books: the plight of the marginaliz­ed, the ongoing influence of history on the present, the way it feels to grow up in our country, the way the world looks to the psychologi­cally damaged,” the jury said in a release.

“But 2017 was also a year of outliers, of books that were eccentric, challengin­g or thrillingl­y strange, books that took us to amusing or disturbing places.” Also making the longlist: David Chariandy for Brother (McClelland & Stewart)

David Demchuk for The Bone Mother (ChiZine Publicatio­ns)

Joel Thomas Hynes for We’ll All Be Burnt in Our Beds Some Night (Harper Perennial, an imprint of Harper Collins Publishers Ltd)

Andree A. Michaud for Boundary, translated by Donald Winkler (Biblioasis Internatio­nal Translatio­n Series)

Josip Novakovich for Tumbleweed (Esplanade Books/Vehicule Press)

Ed O’Loughlin for Minds of Winter (House of Anansi Press)

Zoey Leigh Peterson for Next Year, For Sure (Doubleday Canada)

Michael Redhill for Bellevue Square (Doubleday Canada)

Deborah Willis for The Dark and Other Love Stories (Hamish Hamilton Canada)

Michelle Winters for I Am a Truck (Invisible Publishing)

Last year, Thien, a Vancouverb­orn, Montreal-based author was honoured for her novel Do Not Say We Have Nothing, which is set in China before, during and after the 1989 Tiananmen Square protests.

This year’s ceremony will be the first since philanthro­pist Jack Rabinovitc­h’s death last month at the age of 87. Rabinovitc­h founded the Giller Prize.

“Canadian literature has lost a dear friend,” Thien said of Rabinovitc­h before announcing the long list.

 ??  ?? Eden Robinson
Eden Robinson
 ??  ?? Rachel Cusk
Rachel Cusk

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