The Niagara Falls Review

Brother wins $50,000 fiction prize

Writers’ Trust honours writers in several categories

- MAIJA KAPPLER

TORONTO — David Chariandy’s novel Brother has won the $50,000 Rogers Writers’ Trust Fiction Prize.

Brother is a coming-of-age story about two siblings, the sons of Trinidadia­n immigrants, who confront violence and prejudice in a Toronto housing complex.

In a video introducin­g the book that was shown during the ceremony, Chariandy said that while the story is fictional, he drew on his own experience­s of growing up black in Toronto’s east end.

“Writing this novel might be imagined to be a way of working through the vulnerabil­ity I felt growing up,” he said, “and the possibilit­y that life would take an ugly turn.”

Jury members, who selected Brother from 141 submitted novels and short story collection­s, praised Chariandy’s “stunning lyrical writing, pitch perfect pacing, and unexpected humour.”

Chariandy said he hopes readers walk away from the book with “a greater understand­ing of the complexity of their cities and suburbs.”

The other awards — each worth $25,000 — honoured authors for their careers to date, rather than for one specific work.

Saskatoon poet Louise Bernice Halfe received the Latner Writers’ Trust Poetry Prize for her four collection­s detailing her time in residentia­l schools.

Thunder Bay, Ont., author Ruby Slipperjac­k won the Vicky Metcalf Award for Literature for Young People.

Diane Schoemperl­en won the Matt Cohen Award and Billie Livingston won the Trust Engel/Findley Award for their bodies of work.

 ??  ?? David Chariandy
David Chariandy

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada