Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Kanya gets a step closer to big prize

Shortliste­d for the 2021 Commonweal­th Short Story Competitio­n, the young Lankan writer has now won the Asia Regional Prize

- To read The Sunday Times interview with Kanya, please visit sundaytime­s.lk/ and view the May 9, 2021 edition, Plus Section.

Sri Lankan writer Kanya D’Almeida has won the Asia Regional Prize in the 2021 Commonweal­th Short Story Competitio­n. Now in its tenth year, the Commonweal­th Short Story Prize is awarded annually for the best piece of unpublishe­d short fiction from the Commonweal­th. This year’s regional winners, announced on May 12, were chosen from a record 6423 entries from 50 Commonweal­th countries.

“Even among Asia’s gratifying­ly strong showing in this year’s Commonweal­th short fiction sweepstake­s, Kanya’s submission stood out. A life-affirming story of love among the rambutan and clove trees of Sri Lanka – love for a baby not one’s own, love for a high-spirited elderly woman. Love found not among the stars but in human excrement. Literally. And all the more glorious for it. Just as class difference­s are subtly shaded, so too the narrator is aptly, and exquisitel­y, named Ishwari (Sanskrit for Goddess, with a capital ‘G’). A tale powerfully realized,” said Judge, Khademul Islam.

Kanya’s fiction has appeared on ‘Jaggery’ and ‘The Bangalore Review’. She holds an MFA in Fiction from Columbia University’s School of the Arts and is working on a book of short stories about mad women. Kanya is the host of ‘The Darkest Light’, a podcast exploring birth and motherhood in Sri Lanka.

“Writing in the English language, in a former British colony, means you’re never quite at home in language. All around you a world is unfolding in other tongues; words must either be cramped or elongated to fit circumstan­ces that are decidedly not English; and your characters themselves may be unfamiliar with the language of your own story! That’s why I believe the Commonweal­th Short Story Prize is such a haven for writers across the world—it is perhaps the only forum large enough to accommodat­e the many expression­s of language that thrive from region to region. To be in the company of such a diversity of voices, to have my story read by such a diversity of judges, and to see the story emerge as one of the regional winners, is one of the great honours of my life,” said Kanya in the announceme­nt issued by Commonweal­th Writers.

The winner of the Commonweal­th Short Story Prize will be announced on June 30, 2021.

A.I.

 ?? Pic by Nejma Nefertiti ?? Kanya D’Almeida: A strong voice for women.
Pic by Nejma Nefertiti Kanya D’Almeida: A strong voice for women.

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