![]() ![]() Two awards were given out for unpublished works. The published works in French category was won by two books: Uiesh, Quelque Part by Joséphine Bacon and Nipimanitu by Pierrot Ross-Tremblay.įrancine Merasty received the prize for work in an Indigenous language for Iskotew Iskwew. The comic follows two Indigenous best friends - Miikwan is Anishinaabe and Dez is Inninew - who are coming of age in an urban environment where women from their community are disappearing. Tasha Spillett's first book, Surviving the City, a graphic novel illustrated by Natasha Donovan, received the prize in the works in an alternative format category. ![]() ![]() Ktunaxa nation writer Smokii Sumac won the published poetry in English category for his debut poetry collection y ou are enough: love poems for the end of the world. The book takes on themes of love, heartbreak, addiction, healing, gender and identity. Tanya Tagaq melds memoir and fiction with emotional first book, Split Tooth The book was longlisted for the 2018 Scotiabank Giller Prize and was a nominee for the 2019 Amazon Canada First Novel Award. Tagaq's novel follows a young girl's upbringing in 1970s Nunavut, a place of mythic natural wonders as well as addiction and violence. The annual awards ceremony recognizes literature by Indigenous writers in Canada across seven categories. Musician Tanya Tagaq has won the best published prose in English category at the Indigenous Voices Awards for her debut novel, Split Tooth. ![]()
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