The Hamilton Spectator

Taylor Prize finalists announced

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TORONTO — Two award-winning memoirists are among the five finalists vying for the RBC Taylor Prize, with the winner set to receive $30,000. A three-member jury revealed the short list for the non-fiction prize at an announceme­nt in Toronto on Wednesday.

Darrel McLeod of Sooke, B.C., is being recognized for his debut “Mamaskatch: A Cree Coming of Age” (Douglas & McIntyre), which won the Governor General’s Literary Award in the non-fiction category last fall, about growing up steeped in violence and the inherited trauma of his mother’s experience in residentia­l school.

Ottawa-based author Elizabeth Hay, winner of the 2018 Hilary Weston Writers’ Trust Prize for Nonfiction, is also in the running for “All Things Consoled: A Daughter’s Memoir” (McClelland & Stewart) about looking after her parents in their final days and untangling the family history they left behind.

Victoria-based Bill Gaston made the cut for “Just Let Me Look at You: On Fatherhood” (Hamish Hamilton) about his relationsh­ip with his alcoholic father and their shared love of fishing. .

Kate Harris, who lives off the grid near the border of B.C., Yukon and Alaska, received a nod for “Lands of Lost Borders: Out of Bounds on the Silk Roads” (Knopf Canada) about her bicycle travels retracing the fabled network of trade routes connecting Asia and Europe.

Also on short list is U.K.-born cellist Ian Hampton’s “Jan in 35 Pieces: A Memoir in Music” (Porcupine’s Quill), reflecting on his years in Vancouver’s classical musical scene and the compositio­ns that shaped his career.

The prize, establishe­d in 1998, will be awarded March 4. Finalists receive $5,000, and the winner gets an additional $25,000.

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