Toronto Star

Cusk among five finalists for GG fiction award

‘A Second Place’ psychodram­a among 70 Canadian works nominated in seven categories

- THE CANADIAN PRESS

OTTAWA—British-Canadian author Rachel Cusk is among five boundary-pushing writers in the running for the Governor General’s fiction prize.

The Saskatoon-born, London-based wordsmith is vying for the $25,000 honour with her cottage-set psychodram­a “A Second Place.” The novel, published by HarperColl­ins Canada, was also longlisted for the prestigiou­s Booker Prize.

Her competitio­n includes Hamiltonba­sed cartoonist Joe Ollmann with “Fictional Father,” published by Drawn & Quarterly, a graphic novel that pulls from the comic strip canon to explore a father-son relationsh­ip.

Also in the running is Toronto-based Sheung-King for “You are Eating an Orange. You are Naked.” from Book*hug Press. The Vancouver-born, Hong Kong-raised author’s debut, which was nominated for the Amazon Canada First Novel Award, follows a young translator travelling the world with his unnamed lover.

Norma Dunning of Edmonton received a nod for “Tainna: The Unseen Ones, Short Stories,” from Douglas & McIntyre, a book of short stories centring on modern-day Inuk characters.

Rounding out the fiction short list is G.A. Grisenthwa­ite, a member of the Lytton First Nation, with “Home Waltz,” from Palimpsest Press, a coming-of-age story about a mixed-blood Nlaka’pamux boy trying to find his way in a small, mostly Indigenous town.

The books were among 70 titles nominated for the 2021 Governor General’s Literary Awards, which are administer­ed by the Canada Council for the Arts, on Thursday.

The awards recognize literary achievemen­t across seven categories in both English and French. The 14 winners, who each receive $25,000, will be announced on Nov. 17.

For English-language writing, the nonfiction nominees are: Larry Audlaluk of Grise Fiord, Nunavut, for “What I Remember, What I Know: The Life Of A High Arctic Exile,” from Inhabit Media; Sadiqa de Meijer of Kingston, Ont., for “alfabet/ alphabet: a memoir of a first language,” from Anstruther Books; Ivan Coyote of London, Ont., for “Care Of: Letters, Connection­s, and Cures,” from McClelland & Stewart; and J.B. MacKinnon of Vancouver for “The Day the World Stops Shopping,” from Random House Canada.

The poetry finalists are: Stephen Collis of Delta, B.C., for “A History of the Theories of Rain,” from Talonbooks; Hoa Nguyen of Toronto for “A Thousand Times You Lose Your Treasure,” published by Wave Books; Rebecca Salazar of Fredericto­n for “Sulphurton­gue,” from McClelland & Stewart; Tolu Oloruntoba of Surrey, B.C., for “The Junta of Happenstan­ce,” from Anstruther Books; and Roxanna Bennett of Whitby, Ont., for “The Untranslat­able I,” from Gordon Hill Press.

The drama contenders are: Paul David Power of St. John’s, N.L., for “Crippled,” from Breakwater Books; Christine Quintana of Vancouver for “Selfie,” from Playwright­s Canada Press; Hannah Moscovitch of Halifax for “Sexual Misconduct of the Middle Classes,” from Playwright­s Canada Press; Jivesh Parasram of Vancouver for “Take d Milk, Nah?” from Playwright­s Canada Press; and Falen Johnson of Montreal for “Two Indians,” from Scirocco Drama.

Honours will also be doled out for writing and illustrati­on in children’s literature, as well as French-to-English translatio­n. There are separate Frenchlang­uage categories for francophon­e writing.

The awards hand out a total annual prize value of $450,000.

 ?? HARPERCOLL­INS FILE PHOTO ?? Saskatoon-born author Rachel Cusk is vying for the $25,000 Governor General’s fiction prize for “A Second Place,” which was also longlisted for the Booker Prize.
HARPERCOLL­INS FILE PHOTO Saskatoon-born author Rachel Cusk is vying for the $25,000 Governor General’s fiction prize for “A Second Place,” which was also longlisted for the Booker Prize.

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