What Awards Have Top Canadian Authors Female Won Recently?

2026-06-19 18:37:46 114
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5 Antworten

Russell
Russell
2026-06-21 09:27:29
Honestly, scrolling through the Giller Prize and Governor General's shortlists the last couple years, it's been refreshing. Not just the same few names anymore. I think Esi Edugyan winning the Giller for 'Washington Black' a few years back was a highlight, but she's not exactly 'recent' for this question. More recently, maybe 2022? I remember Suzette Mayr's 'The Sleeping Car Porter' winning the Giller, which was fantastic—a queer, Black Canadian woman winning for a historical novel about a Black porter. That's the kind of award news that feels meaningful.

It's also worth looking beyond the big fiction prizes. Runners-up and finalists tell a story too. I saw Catherine Leroux on the Scotiabank Giller shortlist for 'The Party Wall', which was translated from French—another important layer. The awards are starting to reflect the actual makeup of who's writing here, not just who has the longstanding reputation. Still feels a bit slow, but the momentum is there if you look past the headline winners.
Theo
Theo
2026-06-21 18:11:32
Miriam Toews is always in the conversation, though 'Fight Night' was a finalist for the Giller a few years back rather than a winner. Sometimes the most 'top' authors are the ones consistently shortlisted, shaping the literary dialogue. For a recent win, I'd point to the Rogers Writers' Trust Fiction Prize going to Tsering Yangzom Lama for 'We Measure the Earth with Our Bodies' in 2022—a stunning debut about Tibetan refugees. It feels like the definition of a 'recent' significant award for a rising Canadian female author.
Gavin
Gavin
2026-06-23 01:04:57
The recent award that really stuck with me was seeing Sheung-King winning the 2021 Amazon Canada First Novel Award for 'You Are Eating an Orange. You Are Naked.'—a brilliant, genre-defying book. While not a female author, it shows the awards are open to daring work. For female authors specifically, I think the Griffin Poetry Prize shortlist often features incredible Canadian women like Anne Carson, who is a genre unto herself, or more recent voices like Liz Howard. The awards scene isn't just the Giller; the nonfiction and poetry categories are where some of the most exciting female writers are being celebrated. I read a lot of essays, and I remember Jessica J. Lee's 'Two Trees Make a Forest' getting a lot of critical acclaim and prize attention a while back, which was well-deserved for its blend of nature writing and family history.
Declan
Declan
2026-06-23 04:01:33
The question about recent awards for top Canadian women writers makes me realize how much the landscape is shifting. Margaret Atwood, of course, is a perpetual force; her 'The Testaments' winning the Booker Prize (shared with Bernardine Evaristo) in 2019 was a huge moment, but that feels like a lifetime ago in publishing years. More recently, the spotlight feels like it's rightly broadening.

I've been particularly impressed by the recognition for Indigenous voices. Katherena Vermette's 'The Strangers' won the Atwood Gibson Writers' Trust Fiction Prize in 2021, which is a major Canadian honor. Her work feels so vital and necessary. Similarly, the rise of poets like Billy-Ray Belcourt, while not a woman, has paved the way for a new wave, but I'm still waiting for a female Indigenous author to take that top fiction prize in a truly disruptive way.

On the speculative side, I was thrilled to see Emily St. John Mandel's 'Sea of Tranquility' on so many lists, though it was oddly snubbed by some major awards—it had that literary crossover appeal that should have been a contender. Maybe the recent awards scene is less about a single blockbuster and more about acknowledging a fantastic diversity of styles, from the intimate family sagas of Miriam Toews to the sharp, dark humor of Mona Awad.
Charlotte
Charlotte
2026-06-24 19:43:28
I keep a closer eye on sci-fi and fantasy awards, so my frame of reference is different. For a recent win, Marie Bilodeau is a francophone Canadian fantasy author who won the Aurora Award for 'The Poisoner's Garden' not too long ago. The Auroras are our national speculative fiction awards. Also, Sebastien de Castell isn't female, but his work is great. For a top female name in that scene, maybe Kelley Armstrong? She's consistently popular, though I'm not sure about a recent major award win—she might be more of a bestselling force than an awards darling, which is a whole other kind of achievement.
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