ONTD

7:12 pm - 11/13/2012

Book Post: Linda Spalding wins Governor-General's award



Toronto writer Linda Spalding has joined husband Michael Ondaatje in the highest rank of the Canadian literary pantheon by winning the $25,000 Governor-General’s Literary Award for her novel, The Purchase, bringing the total of G-G awards on the family mantelpiece to a record six.



Joining Spalding in the parade of winners yesterday was Saskatchewan-born, British-based writer Ross King, who earned his second non-fiction G-G award for Leonardo and the Last Supper, a widely praised look at the Renaissance artist and the fate of his most famous painting. Altogether, the awards honoured 14 writers and artists, evenly divided between French and English, in seven categories.

Born in Kansas and living in Hawaii when she met her Canadian husband and moved to Toronto in 1982, Spalding based The Purchase on the curious story of her own ancestors – Quakers who left Pennsylvania in the late 18th century and, against the tenets of their religion, became slave owners in western Virginia. The author’s attempt to comprehend their transformation combines gritty details of pioneer life with universal themes of morality and faith.

“It addresses the question of what happens when you disregard your own beliefs and convictions and do something that you yourself can’t bear,” Spalding said in a recent interview with The Globe and Mail.

Although the novel has scant Canadian content, winning the award inspired an outburst of patriotism from the novelist. “Suddenly I feel very Canadian,” Spalding said after accepting the award. “I’ve always felt half Canadian, but this is making me feel incredibly Canadian. It’s like being touched by a wand. Probably tomorrow I’ll be bilingual.”

Montreal-born, San Franciso-based Julie Bruck won the award for poetry for Monkey Ranch, a book animated by an “offbeat, caring and companionable sensibility,” according to the prize jury.

Nova Scotian playwright Catherine Banks won the drama category for It is Solved by Walking, a play based on poet Wallace Stevens’s Thirteen Ways of Looking at a Blackbird, which the jury described as “a singular and inspired love story that is also a meditation on the need to give full expression to the complexity of one’s inner life.”

Susin Nielsen won for children’s literature for The Reluctant Journal of Henry K. Larsen, with the award for illustration of a children’s book going to Isabelle Arsenault of Montreal for Virginia Wolf.

Finally, Nigel Spencer of Montreal won the translation award for his work on Marie-Claire Blais’s Mai at the Predators’ Ball.




I wish I was half of a literary power couple. I wonder if Daniel Alarcon is single?

What are you reading ONTD? Thanks to last night's book post I am now reading A Tale of Two Cities and loving it.


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ms_mmelissa 14th-Nov-2012 12:53 am (UTC)
Ondaatje is kind of hit or miss for me. Like I loved In the Skin of a Lion and Cat's Table, but I was sort of ambivalent towards The English Patient and Divisadero.

He's definitely not for everyone.
beaucadeau 14th-Nov-2012 12:58 am (UTC)
I've read Cat's Table and liked it, but the rest really fell flat for me. I guess part of the reason why I'm not big on him is because he's like the male Atwood for Canadian lit and ugh.
ms_mmelissa 14th-Nov-2012 01:00 am (UTC)
LOL I wouldn't call him the male Atwood (is there a male Atwood? She's kind of on her own in terms of literary super stardom).

OMG there were parts of Cat's Table that just broke my heart. I loved the part where he describes the boys diving into the pool to retrieve all the spoons and the girl on the roller skates and his crush on his cousin. <3
brokenseas 14th-Nov-2012 01:12 am (UTC)
I've only read the English Patient by him, but that was one I wanted to like more than I did. Felt a bit meandering though I liked it on the whole, and liked the narrative form.
tangerinefriday 14th-Nov-2012 03:54 am (UTC)
MTE
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