Poor Maggie struggles to master her chopsticks — it seems nearly everyone around the dinner table has something to say about the “right” way to hold them! But when Father reminds her not to worry about everyone else, Maggie finally gets a grip on an important lesson.
was born in England and grew up in Vancouver. His work has been published in
.
lives and works in Montréal with her family. She loves the creation of characters and sensitive stories, which are sometimes funny, sometimes dark.
Winner! Making Headlines: 100 Years of The Vancouver Sun
by Shelley Fralic, with research by Kate Bird
Publisher: The Vancouver Sun
This book is a celebration of
The Vancouver Sun‘s first 100 years. It tells the story of Vancouver and the world through the eyes of a newspaper. Decade by decade, it provides fascinating stories from the sinking of the Titanic (just two months after its first issue), through wars, riots, parades, Royal visits and the Olympic Games. Filled with stunning images shot by
The Sun‘s award winning photographers, it celebrates all that the newspaper has been, all that it is and all that it will continue to be as
The Sun continues to offer all of us that first draft of history.
Shelley Fralic has worked at
The Vancouver Sun since 1979. After stints as the paper’s assistant features editor, projects editor and assistant managing editor, she was appointed executive editor in 1999. In 2003, she decided to return to her first love, writing. Today, she pens a
Vancouver Sun column on social issues, pop culture and modern-day life.
Lieutenant Governor's Award for Literary Excellence
2013 Jury: Brian Brett, author and 2012 recipient of the Lieutenant Governor’s Award for Literary Excellence; Lynn Copeland, former Dean of Library Services at Simon Fraser University; and, Alma Lee, founder of the Vancouver International Writers and Readers Festival.
Winner! Lorna Crozier
“Lorna Crozier is a memoirist, professor, Officer of the Order of Canada, and Fellow of the Royal Society of Canada. But first she is one of the finest poets writing today. Her poetry is praised for its ‘felicity of language, depth of feeling and compassionate and compelling vision.’ (Canadian Literature) She ‘glimpses the mystery of light at the heart of being.’ (Books in Canada)” – jury
Lorna Crozier has published 17 books of poetry, most recently The Book of Marvels: A Compendium of Everyday Things, named as one of The Globe’s Top 100 Books of 2012 and nominated for this year’s Pat Lowther Award for the best book of poetry by a Canadian woman. She has won this award twice before and has been the recipient of most of this country’s major literary prizes, including the Governor General’s Award, the Canadian Authors’ Association Award, the National Magazine’s Gold Medal for Poetry, the CBC national writing competition, and the 2009 Hubert Evan’s Award for BC’s best book of nonfiction for her memoir, Small Beneath the Sky. She was also named an Officer of the Order of Canada in 2011 and was recognized as a Fellow of the Royal Society of Canada in 2009.
Beyond the writing awards, Lorna has been honoured for great distinction in both teaching and scholarly research in the academic community, receiving the University of Victoria’s 2004 Distinguished Professor’s Award. For her contribution to Canadian literature, she has received three honorary doctorates.
Since the beginning of her writing career, Lorna has been known for her inspired teaching and mentoring of other poets. Since 1991 she has been a beloved teacher of writing at the University of Victoria. She’s read for Queen Elizabeth and has performed her poems on every continent except Antarctica. In addition to selections of her work appearing in such languages as Chinese, Serbian, Italian and Portugese, a book of her poems in Spanish was published by a press in Mexico City. Another of her books was translated into French and published by Vermillon Press in Ottawa.
Her reputation as a generous and inspiring artist extends from her passion for the craft of poetry to her teaching and through to her involvement in various social causes. In addition to leading poetry workshops across the globe, Lorna has given benefit readings for numerous organizations such as the SPCA, the BC Land Conservancy, the Victoria READ Society, and PEERS, a group committed to helping prostitutes get off the street. A regular contributor to CBC radio, in 2011 she hosted a special edition on poverty for the show, “The Current.”
Margaret Laurence called her “a poet to be grateful for.” Books in Canada claimed “she is one of the most original poets writing in English today.” The Ottawa Citizen described her as “One of Canada’s most read and most honoured poets….[Crozier’s poems] become part of the reader’s permanent memory.” Of her selected poems, Ursula Le Guin wrote in The New York Times Book Review, “What a joy to have a volume of selected poems by this marvellous Canadian poet, storyteller, truth-teller, visionary.” Of her memoir, Sharon Butala wrote. “I found it deeply touching,” and the reviewer of her most recent collection, The Book of Marvels, in The Globe and Mail said that after reading this book, “From here on in, it will be impossible to be bored or take anything for granted ever again. And for that, we can ever be grateful to Lorna Crozier.”
More information about Lorna Crozier can be found on her
website.
Winner! Sarah Ellis
“Sarah Ellis is one of the most illustrious and admired writers for children in Canada today. Her stories and novels are loved by young adults for their wit, intelligence, compassion, and generosity of spirit – characteristics she brings to interpersonal relationships whether in small groups or in her frequent public addresses. … (a) tireless contributor to the advocacy of the importance of children’s literature in Canada and internationally.” – jury
Born in Vancouver in 1952, Sarah Ellis is one of the most illustrious and admired writers for children in Canada today. As a child, she attended school in Vancouver and went on to study English and Library Studies at UBC, earning her Master’s Degree there. She continued her studies at Simmons College in Boston where she studied at the Center for the Study of Children’s Literature. She became a librarian at the Toronto Public Library, then the Vancouver Public Library and the North Vancouver District Library. During her many years as a librarian she developed her storytelling skills and puppetry. She now writes reviews and is a sought-after lecturer nationally and internationally on writing and on Canadian Children’s books.
Among her many awards, she received the first Sheila A. Egoff Award in 1987 for her first book, The Baby Project. She also won the Sheila A. Egoff Award in 1997 and again in 2007. She won the 1991 Governor General’s Award for children’s Literature for her novel, Pick-up Sticks. Out of the Blue won the IODE Violet Downey Book Award and the Mr. Christie Book Award. In 1995, she was awarded the Vicky Metcalf Award for a Body of Work and in 1999, she was asked to be the first Writer-in-Residence children’s author at Massey College at the University of Toronto. She was also a finalist for the Norma Fleck Award for her non-fiction book, The Young Writer’s Companion. In 2007, Sarah won the $20,000 TD Canadian Children’s Literature Award for her novel, Odd Man Out. In 2012, she was the writer-in-residence at the Osborne Collection of Early Children’s Books in Toronto. This year she was one of two Canadian nominees for the international book prize, The Astrid Lindgren Memorial Award.
Sarah has served on numerous boards and juries, internationally and locally, which include serving on the board of the Canadian Children’s Book Centre and Children’s Literature New England (current), as well as serving on juries for the Governor General’s Literary Awards, the Burt Award for Young Adult Literature, and various provincial book awards. Sarah also writes a book review column for Quill and Quire magazine and is a regular reviewer for The Hornbook.
Currently, Sarah travels widely, giving lectures on writing and children’s literature. She also teaches writing in a distance-education Master’s Degree program with Vermont College of Fine Arts while continuing to pursue her own writing in her home in Vancouver.
More information about Sarah Ellis can be found on her
website.
Source:
http://www.bcbookprizes.ca/winners/2013