News

St. Boniface Elegies wins the 2020 Lansdowne Prize for Poetry

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The winners of the 2020 Manitoba Book Awards have been announced! Congratulations to Catherine Hunter for winning the Lansdowne Prize for Poetry. Due to COVID-19 restrictions an awards gala is impossible this year, so instead the Manitoba Book Awards is celebrating the winners via social media.

Catherine Hunter shortlisted for the 2020 McNally Robinson Book of the Year Award

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Catherine Hunter's St. Boniface Elegies has been shortlisted for the McNally Robinson Book of the Year Award.

Laurelyn Whitt and Catherine Hunter shortlisted for 2020 Lansdowne Prize for Poetry

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Laurelyn Whitt's Adagio for the Horizon and Catherine Hunter's St. Boniface Elegies have been shortlisted for the Lansdowne Prize for Poetry.

Robert J. Young and George Amabile shortlisted for 2020 Michael Van Rooy Award

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Robert J. Young's Another Spy for Paris and George Amabile's Operation Stealth Seed have been shortlisted for the Michael Van Rooy Award for Genre Fiction.

Jennifer Houle shortlisted for the Fiddlehead Poetry Book Prize

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Jennifer Houle has just been shortlisted for the New Brunswick Book Awards' Fiddlehead Poetry Book Prize for her poetry collection Virga.

Emilia Nielsen finalist for Fred Cogswell Poetry Award

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Emilia Nielsen has just been named a finalist for the 2019 Fred Cogswell Award for her poetry collection Body Work.

Sunday October 13, 2019

Winnipeg

CBC

St. Boniface Elegies - CBC The Weekend Morning Show MB

Poet and English professor Catherine Hunter has been named a finalist for the prestigious award. Her collection of poetry, "St Boniface Elegies", deals with many themes, particularly the recent death of her husband Ron, making the recognition bittersweet. Listen to the full interview here: https://www.cbc.ca/listen/live-radio/1-367-the-weekend-morning-show-manitoba/clip/15741076-winnipeg-poet-named-as-finalist-for-the-governor-general-literary-awards
(7:50)

Catherine Hunter is the author of After Light, St. Boniface Elegies, In the First Early Days of My Death, Latent Heat, and Rush Hour

UWinnipeg prof shortlisted for Governor General’s Award

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The Canada Council for the Arts revealed the 2019 finalists for the Governor General’s Literary Awards (GGLA). The list includes UWinnipeg’s Dr. Catherine Hunter’s book of poetry, St. Boniface Elegies. The GGLA are one of the oldest and most prestigious literary awards programs in Canada. Her book is one of the 70 finalists that were selected by peer-assessment committees from some 1,400 books in seven categories in both English and French. In four sections, St. Boniface Elegies traces Hunter’s relationships with her family and her community through poems about travel, love, illness, work, and the writing life. “We congratulate Dr. Hunter on being a finalist for a Governor General’s Literary Award” said Dr. Glenn Moulaison, UWinnipeg Dean of Arts. “Writers are often told to write about what they know. In the case of St. Boniface Elegies, it is obvious that Dr. Hunter has taken this to heart. Writing about what you know means writing about what you experience, love, and miss, and read, and really just knowing what good writing is supposed to look like. We are lucky she shares her talent with our students.” Hunter is a professor of English at UWinnipeg. Her earlier poetry collection Latent Heat won the McNally Robinson Manitoba Book of the Year Award, and four of the poems in St. Boniface Elegies, published earlier in CV2, won the Manitoba Magazine Award for Best Poem or Suite of Poems and earned Honorable Mention in the National Magazine Awards. Her recent novel After Light (Signature) spans for generations of an Irish-American-Canadian family in a tale of love, war, trauma, and the power of art. She has also published several mysteries with Ravenstone/Turnstone, and recorded a spoken word CD (Rush Hour, from Cyclops Press, with a bonus track by The Weakerthans). Her writing has also appeared in the journals The Malahat Review, Prism International, Essays on Canadian Writing, Matrix, West Coast Line, Prairie Fire, CV2, and Grain, and the anthologies The Echoing Years: Contemporary Poetry from Canada and Ireland; Post Prairie: An Anthology of New Poetry; Best Canadian Poems 2013; and Best Canadian Poems 2015. She edited Exposed, an anthology of five new women poets, Best the First Word: The Poetry of Lorna Crozier, and, for 10 years, she was the editor of The Muses’ Company poetry press. Since 1991, she has enjoyed teaching literature and creative writing at UWinnipeg. The winners will be revealed on October 29.

Two Winnipeggers among finalists for Governor General’s Literary Awards

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The finalists for the 2019 Governor General’s Literary Awards were announced Wednesday, with two Winnipeg authors making the cut. Winnipeg’s Joan Thomas has been nominated in the fiction category for “Five Wives.” Catherine Hunter, also from Winnipeg, has been nominated in the poetry category for “St. Boniface Elegies.” The Canada Council for the Arts said 70 books across seven categories have been deemed the best books published in Canada this year. About 1,400 were submitted to a peer assessment committee for consideration. “By addressing issues we care about, igniting our imaginations, choosing the right words or brilliantly transposing a story into illustrations, the 2019 Governor General’s Literary Awards finalists stoke the fire not only of our shared cultural life, but of our individual lives as well. They represent the richness, strength and excellence of Canadian literature,” said Simon Brault, director and CEO of the Canadian Council for the Arts, in a news release. According to HarperCollins, Thomas’ Five Wives is based on a true story and follows the lives of five missionary women forced to survive with their children in an Ecuador rainforest in the 1950s, after their husbands were killed. Hunter’s publisher describes her book as a four-part exploration of “a poet’s relationships with her family and her community.” The 14 winners will be announced on Oct. 29, and a ceremony to celebrate will be held on Dec. 12.

Tuesday September 24, 2019

Winnipeg

680 CJOB

Linda Kenyon - CJOB Interview

Linda Kenyon was interviewed on 680 CJOB where she discussed her new book, Sea Over Bow
(MP3 file, 11:46)

Listen to the MP3 clip (right click to download)

Linda Kenyon is the author of Sea Over Bow: A North Atlantic Crossing

Tuesday August 20, 2019

Toronto

CIUT 89.5

Linda Kenyon - HOWL

Linda Kenyon was interviewed by Howl's Valentino Assenza on CIUT 89.5 where she discussed her new book, Sea Over Bow
(MP3 file, 22:04)

Listen to the MP3 clip (right click to download)

Linda Kenyon is the author of Sea Over Bow: A North Atlantic Crossing

Thursday July 25, 2019

Owen Sound

560 CFOS

Linda Kenyon - CFOS

Linda Kenyon was interviewed by 560 CFOS's Dave Carr about her new book, Sea Over Bow
(MP3 file, 14:31)

Listen to the MP3 clip (right click to download)

Linda Kenyon is the author of Sea Over Bow: A North Atlantic Crossing

Emilia Nielsen shortlisted for Pat Lowther Memorial Award

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Emilia Nielsen has just been shortlisted for the League of Canadian Poets' Pat Lowther Memorial Award for her poetry collection Body Work.

C.C. Benison shortlisted for 2019 Manitoba Book Awards

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C.C. Benison's Paul Is Dead has been shortlisted for the McNally Robinson Book of the Year Award and the Margaret Laurence Award for Fiction.

Linda Kenyon shortlisted for 2019 Mary Scorer Award

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Linda Kenyon's Sea Over Bow: A North Atlantic Crossing has been shortlisted for the Mary Scorer Award for Best Book by a Manitoba Publisher.

Body Work shortlisted for Lambda Award

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We're thrilled to announce that Emilia Nielsen's Body Work has just been shortlisted for a Lambda Literary Award in the Lesbian Poetry category. Winners will be announced June 3 in New York City.

Marlis Wesseler wins High Plains Book Award

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Congratulations to Marlis Wesseler who has won the 2018 High Plains Book Award—Best Book by a Woman Writer for her book The Last Chance Ladies' Book Club, published by Signature Editions. The High Plains Book Awards recognize regional authors and/or literary works which examine and reflect life on the High Plains including the US states of Montana, North Dakota, South Dakota, Wyoming, Nebraska, Colorado, and Kansas, and the Canadian provinces of Alberta, Manitoba, and Saskatchewan.

George Amabile’s Martial Music wins Bressani

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George Amabile has won the 2018 F.G. Bressani Literary Prize for his poetry collection Martial Music.

Three Signature Titles shortlisted for Manitoba Book Awards

Signature Editions has thee titles shortlisted for the 2018 Manitoba Book Awards
We hope to see our Winnipeg peeps at the Manitoba Book Awards this Friday, June 15 to cheer on our 3 shortlisted titles:
Tenille K. Campbell's#IndianLovePoems up for the Mary Scorer Best Book by a Manitoba Publisher
Ted Landrum's Midway Radicals & Archi-Poems up for the Lansdowne Prize for Poetry
Jim Nason's Spirit of a Hundred Thousand Dead Animals up for the Manuela Dias Book Design Award
Awards will be handed out this Friday, June 15 at the Manitoba Book Awards Gala
7:00 PM – 10:00 PM at Robert B. Schultz Lecture Theatre 91 Ralph Campbell Rd., Winnipeg
Tickets available online through eventbrite.ca

The Last Chance Ladies Book Club

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Congratulations to Marlis Wesseler who has been shortlisted for the 2018 High Plains Book Awards in the category Woman Writer for her book The Last Chance Ladies' Book Club, published by Signature Editions. The High Plains Book Awards recognize regional authors and/or literary works which examine and reflect life on the High Plains including the US states of Montana, North Dakota, South Dakota, Wyoming, Nebraska, Colorado, and Kansas, and the Canadian provinces of Alberta, Manitoba, and Saskatchewan.

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