Ethel Wilson Fiction Prize
From Infogalactic: the planetary knowledge core
The Ethel Wilson Fiction Prize, established in 1985 as one of the BC Book Prizes, is awarded annually to the best work of fiction by a resident of British Columbia, Canada.
The award is named after novelist and short story writer Ethel Wilson, author of Swamp Angel (1954) and The Innocent Traveller (1949).
Winners and nominees
Year | Winner | Nominated |
---|---|---|
1985 | Audrey Thomas, Intertidal Life |
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1986 | Keath Fraser, Foreign Affairs |
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1987 | Leona Gom, Housebroken |
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1988 | George McWhirter, Cage |
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1989 | Bill Schermbrucker, Mimosa |
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1990 | Keith Maillard, Motet |
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1991 | Audrey Thomas, Wild Blue Yonder |
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1992 | Don Dickinson, Blue Husbands |
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1993 | W.D. Valgardson, The Girl with the Botticelli Face |
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1994 | Caroline Adderson, Bad Imaginings |
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1995 | Gayla Reid, To Be There With You |
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1996 | Audrey Thomas, Coming Down From Wa |
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1997 | Gail Anderson-Dargatz, The Cure for Death by Lightning |
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1998 | Marilyn Bowering, Visible Worlds |
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1999 | Jack Hodgins, Broken Ground |
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2000 | Michael Turner, The Pornographer's Poem |
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2001 | Eden Robinson, Monkey Beach |
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2002 | Madeleine Thien, Simple Recipes |
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2003 | Carol Shields, Unless |
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2004 | Caroline Adderson, Sitting Practice |
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2005 | Pauline Holdstock, Beyond Measure |
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2006 | Charlotte Gill, Ladykiller |
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2007 | Carol Windley, Home Schooling |
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2008 | Mary Novik, Conceit |
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2009 | Lee Henderson, The Man Game |
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2010 | Cathleen With, Having Faith in the Polar Girls' Prison |
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2011 | Gurjinder Basran, Everything Was Good-Bye[1] |
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2012 | Esi Edugyan, Half-Blood Blues[2] |
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2013 | Bill Gaston, The World[3] |
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2014 | Ashley Little, Anatomy of a Girl Gang[4] |
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2015 | Aislinn Hunter, The World Before Us[5] |
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2016 | Alix Hawley, All True Not a Lie in It[6] |
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References
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External links
- Ethel Wilson Fiction Prize, official website