Edna Staebler Award | |
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Awarded for | the best creative non-fiction book with Canadian significance by a new Canadian writer |
Sponsored by | An Edna Staebler financial endowment |
Country | Canada |
Presented by | Faculty of Arts, Wilfrid Laurier University |
Reward(s) | C$10,000 |
First awarded | 1991 |
Website | Edna Staebler Awards for Creative Non-Fiction |
The Edna Staebler Award for Creative Non-Fiction is an annual literary award recognizing the previous year's best creative nonfiction book with a "Canadian locale and/or significance" that is a Canadian writer's "first or second published book of any type or genre". It was established by an endowment from Edna Staebler, a literary journalist best known for cookbooks, and was inaugurated in 1991 for publication year 1990. The award is administered by Wilfrid Laurier University's Faculty of Arts. [1] Only submitted books are considered.
For purposes of the award, "Creative non-fiction is literary not journalistic. The writer does not merely give information but intimately shares an experience with the reader by telling a factual story using the devices of fiction ... Rather than emphasizing objectivity, the book should have feeling, and should be a compelling, engaging read."
The panel may "grant or withhold the award in any year." In fact the award has been granted every year and there were two winners in 1993 (published 1992).
In the 2020s, the awards were postponed for several years due to the COVID-19 pandemic in Canada. [2] The nominees for 2020 were announced in July 2022, with the winner to be announced in August, and the nominees for 2021 are expected later in the year. [2] Following postponement during the pandemic, a shortlist of nominees was announced on May 18, 2023. [3]
Year | Author | Title | Result | Ref. |
---|---|---|---|---|
1991 | Susan Mayse | Ginger: The Life and Death of Albert Goodwin | Winner | [4] |
1992 | Marie Wadden | Nitassinan: The Innu Struggle to Reclaim Their Homeland | Winner | [5] |
Phil Jenkins | Fields of Vision: A Journey to Canada's Family Farms | Shortlist | ||
Anne Kershaw and Mary Lasovich | Rock-a-bye Baby: A Death Behind Bars | |||
Sherrill MacLaren | Invisible Power: The Women Who Run Canada | |||
Marlene Webber | Street Kids: The Tragedy of Canada's Runaways | |||
1993 | Liza Potvin | White Lies (for my mother) | Winner | [6] |
Elizabeth Hay | The Only Snow in Havana | [7] | ||
1994 | Linda Johns | Sharing a Robin's Life | Winner | [8] |
1995 | Denise Chong | The Concubine's Children | Winner | [9] |
Rosalind MacPhee | Picasso's Woman: A Breast Cancer Story | Shortlist | ||
Jack Kuper | After the Smoke Cleared | |||
Rita Moir | Survival Gear | |||
1996 | George G. Blackburn | The Guns of Normandy | Winner | [10] |
Patricia Pitcher | Artists, Craftsmen and Technocrats: The Dreams, Realities and Illusions of Leadership | Shortlist | ||
Tom Connors | Stompin' Tom: Before the Fame | |||
Frances Backhouse | Women of the Klondike | |||
1997 | Anne Mullens | Timely Death | Winner | [11] |
William Aide | Starting from Porcupine | Shortlist | ||
Phil Jenkins | An Acre of Time: The Enduring Value of Place | |||
Douglas Chambers | Stony Ground: The Making of a Canadian Garden | |||
1998 | Charlotte Gray | Mrs. King | Winner | [12] |
Elisabeth Raab | And Peace Never Came | Shortlist | ||
Lois Sweet | God in the Classroom: The Controversial Issue of Religion in Canada's Schools | |||
A. C. Lewis | Nahanni Remembered | |||
1999 | Michael Poole | Romancing Mary Jane | Winner | [13] |
Will Ferguson | I Was a Teenage Katima-Victim: A Canadian Odyssey | Shortlist | ||
James Mahar and Rowena Mahar | Too Many to Mourn: One Family's Tragedy in the Halifax Explosion | |||
Jori Smith | Charlevoix County: 1930 |
Year | Author | Title | Result | Ref. |
---|---|---|---|---|
2000 | Wayson Choy | Paper Shadows | Winner | [14] |
Beth Powning | Shadow Child: An Apprenticeship in Love and Loss | Shortlist | ||
Ellen Stafford | Always and After | |||
Kevin Patterson | The Water in Between: A Journey at Sea | |||
Andrew Steinmetz | Wardlife: The Apprenticeship of a Young Writer as a Hospital Clerk | |||
2001 | Taras Grescoe | Sacré Blues | Winner | [15] |
Howard Hewer | In for a Penny, In for a Pound: The Adventures and Misadventures of a Wireless Operator in Bomber Command | Shortlist | ||
Mary Pratt | Mary Pratt: A Personal Calligraphy | |||
Trevor Herriot | River in a Dry Land: A Prairie Passage | |||
2002 | Tom Allen | Rolling Home: A Cross Canada Railroad Memoir | Winner | [16] |
Nicholas Pashley | Notes on a Beermat: Drinking and Why It's Necessary | Shortlist | ||
Gabriel Bauer | Waltzing the Tango: Confessions of an Out-of-Step Boomer | |||
Ron Corbett | Last Guide: A Story of Fish and Love The | |||
Cornelia Johanna Baines | Under Syndenham Skies: A Celebration of Country Life | |||
2003 | Alison Watt | The Last Island | Winner | [17] |
Peter McSherry | Mean Streets: Confessions of a Night-Time Taxi Driver | Shortlist | ||
Adam Killick | Racing the White Silence: On The Trail of the Yukon Quest | |||
Dawn Rae Downton | Seldom: A Memoir | |||
2004 | Andrea Curtis | Into the Blue | Winner | [18] |
Ellen Bielawski | Rogue Diamonds: The Rush for Northern Riches on Dene Land | Shortlist | ||
Kevin Bazzana | Wondrous Strange: The Life and Art of Glenn Gould | |||
Ralph Osborne | From Somewhere Else | |||
Alex M. Hall | Discovering Eden: A Lifetime of Paddling Arctic Rivers | |||
2005 | Anne Coleman | I'll Tell You a Secret | Winner | [19] |
Tilda Shalof | A Nurse's Story: Life, Death and In-Between in an Intensive Care Unit | Shortlist | ||
Geoff Heinricks | A Fool and Forty Acres: Conjuring a Vineyard Three Thousand Miles from Burgundy | |||
Elizabeth Hudson | Snow Bodies: One Woman’s Life on the Streets | |||
Michael Mitchell | The Molly Fire | |||
2006 | Francis Chalifour | After | Winner | [20] |
Lisa Rochon | Up North | Shortlist | ||
Rosalind B. Penfold | Dragonslippers: This is What an Abusive Relationship Can Look Like | |||
John Vaillant | The Golden Spruce: A True Story of Myth, Madness and Greed | |||
Kim Bolan | Loss of Faith: How the Air-India Bombers Got Away with Murder | |||
2007 | Linden MacIntyre | Causeway: A Passage from Innocence | Winner | [21] |
Marcello Di Cintio | Poets & Pahlevans: A Journey into the Heart of Iran | Shortlist | ||
Rachel Lebowitz | Hannus | |||
Patrick Friesen | Interim Essays & Mediations | |||
2008 | Bruce Serafin | Stardust | Winner | [22] |
Nathan M. Greenfield | Baptism of Fire: The Second Battle of Ypres and the Forging of Canada, April 1915 | Shortlist | ||
Chantal Hébert | French Kiss: Stephen Harper’s Blind Date with Quebec | |||
Jane Hall | The Red Wall: A Woman in the RCMP | |||
2009 | Russell Wangersky | Burning Down the House: Fighting Fires and Losing Myself | Winner | [23] |
Martin Mitchinson | The Darien Gap: Travels in the Rainforest of Panama | Shortlist | ||
Cathy Ostlere | Lost: A Memoir | |||
Andrew Westoll | The Riverbones: Stumbling After Eden in the Jungles of Suriname |
Year | Author | Title | Result | Ref. |
---|---|---|---|---|
2010 | John Leigh Walters | A Very Capable Life | Winner | [24] |
Allan Casey | Lakeland: Journeys into the Soul of Canada | Shortlist | ||
Else Poulsen | Smiling Bears: A Zookeeper Explores the Behaviour and Emotional Life of Bears | |||
2011 | Helen Waldstein Wilkes | Letters from the Lost | Winner | [25] |
Benjamin Errett | Jew and Improved: How Choosing to be Chosen Made Me a Better Man | Shortlist | ||
Grant Lawrence | Adventures in Solitude: What Not to Wear to a Nude Potluck and Other Stories from Desolation Sound | |||
2012 | Joshua Knelman | Hot Art | Winner | [26] |
Robyn Michele Levy | Most of Me: Surviving My Medical Meltdown | Shortlist | ||
Andrew Westoll | The Chimps of Fauna Sanctuary: A Canadian Story of Resilience and Recovery | |||
2013 | Carol Shaben | Into the Abyss | Winner | [27] |
Kamal Al-Solaylee | Intolerable: A Memoir of Extremes | Shortlist | ||
Nahlah Ayed | A Thousand Farewells: A Reporter’s Journey from Refugee Camp to the Arab Spring | |||
2014 | Arno Kopecky | The Oil Man and the Sea: Navigating the Northern Gateway | Winner | [28] |
Allen Smutylo | The Memory of Water | Shortlist | ||
Alison Wearing | Confessions of a Fairy’s Daughter: Growing Up with a Gay Dad | |||
2015 | Lynn Thomson | Birding with Yeats | Winner | [29] |
Judy McFarlane | Writing with Grace: A Journey Beyond Down Syndrome | Shortlist | ||
Mark Sakamoto | Forgiveness: A Gift From My Grandparents | |||
2016 | Ann Walmsley | The Prison Book Club | Winner | [30] |
Lorimer Shenher | That Lonely Section of Hell: The Botched Investigation of a Serial Killer Who Almost Got Away | Shortlist | ||
Sheila Watt-Cloutier | The Right to Be Cold: One Woman’s Story of Protecting Her Culture, the Arctic and the Whole Planet | |||
2017 | Sonja Larsen | Red Star Tattoo | Winner | |
Duncan McCue | The Shoe Boy | Shortlist | ||
Rajiv Surendra | The Elephants in My Backyard | |||
2018 | Pauline Dakin | Run, Hide, Repeat: A Memoir of a Fugitive Childhood | Winner | [31] |
James Maskalyk | Life on the Ground Floor | Shortlist | ||
Adam Shoalts | A History of Canada in Ten Maps | |||
2019 | Kate Harris | Lands of Lost Borders: Out of Bounds on the Silk Road | Winner | [32] |
Daemon Fairless | Mad Blood Stirring | Shortlist | ||
Terese Marie Mailhot | Heart Berries: A Memoir |
Year | Author | Title | Result | Ref. |
---|---|---|---|---|
2020 | Ann Hui | Chop Suey Nation | Winner | [33] |
Samra Habib | We Have Always Been Here | Shortlist | [2] | |
John Zada | In the Valleys of the Noble Beyond | |||
2021 | Vicki Laveau-Harvie | The Erratics: A Memoir | Winner | [34] |
Jessica J. Lee | Two Trees Make a Forest: In Search of My Family's Past Among Taiwan's Mountains and Coasts | Shortlist | [35] | |
Rachel Matlow | Dead Mom Walking: A Memoir of Miracle Cures and Other Disasters | |||
2022 | Jillian Horton | We Are All Perfectly Fine: A Memoir of Love, Medicine and Healing | Winner | [36] |
2023 | Hilary Peach | Thick Skin: Field Notes from a Sister in the Brotherhood | Winner | [37] |
Cody Caetano | Half-Bads in White Regalia | Shortlist | [38] | |
2024 | Brett Popplewell | Outsider: An Old Man, a Mountain, and the Search for a Hidden Past | Winner | [39] |
Karen Pinchin | Kings of Their Own Ocean: Tuna, Obsession, and the Future of Our Seas | Shortlist | [40] | |
Josie Teed | British Columbiana: A Millennial in a Gold Rush Town |
Wayson Choy was a Canadian novelist. Publishing two novels and two memoirs in his lifetime, he is considered one of the most important pioneers of Asian Canadian literature in Canada, and as an important figure in LGBT literature as one of Canada's first openly gay writers of colour to achieve widespread mainstream success.
Edna Staebler was a Canadian writer and literary journalist, best known for her series of cookbooks, particularly Food That Really Schmecks. While the book contains Mennonite recipes, the content also includes stories and anecdotes about life and home cooking in the rural areas of the Waterloo Region.
Hot Art: Chasing Thieves and Detectives through the Secret World of Stolen Art is a non-fiction book, written by Canadian writer Joshua Knelman, first published in September 2011 by Douglas & McIntyre. In the book, the author chronicles his four-year investigation into the world of international art theft. Knelman traveled from Cairo to New York City, London, Montreal, and Los Angeles compiling his book; which has been called "A major work of investigative journalism", and "a globetrotting mystery filled with cunning and eccentric characters."
The Chimps of Fauna Sanctuary: A Canadian Story of Resilience and Recovery is a non-fiction book, written by Canadian writer Andrew Westoll, first published in May 2011 by HarperCollins. In the book, the author chronicles the time he spent volunteering at the Fauna Sanctuary, an animal refuge in Quebec for chimpanzees that had been used for biomedical research.
Letters from the Lost: A Memoir of Discovery is a non-fiction memoir, written by Canadian writer Helen Waldstein Wilkes, first published in December 2009 by Athabasca University Press. In the book, the author chronicles her discoveries after reading a box of letters she had never before seen. Her Jewish parents had fled Czechoslovakia in April 1939 to seek haven in Canada. Once in place, they corresponded with family and friends, encouraging them to escape the mounting peril that Hitler had envisioned as the Final Solution. Wilkes would learn that shortly after her parents migration, the ability to flee had been curtailed; and that each letter, compounded the historical anguish the writers were forced to endure.
Jew and Improved: How Choosing To Be Chosen Made Me A Better Man is a 2010 non-fiction book by Canadian writer Benjamin Errett. It was first published in June 2010 by HarperCollins and chronicles Errett's conversion to Judaism after becoming engaged to a Jewish woman.
A Very Capable Life: The Autobiography of Zarah Petri is a non-fiction memoir of his mother by the Canadian television host Johnnie Walters, written under his real name John Leigh Walters and published in January 2010 by Athabasca University Press. It re-tells the stories his mother described to him regarding her immigration to Canada in the 1920s. Walters gives his first person account using humor, and intrigue, to share his mother's expressed regards about her depression era experiences.
Lakeland: Journeys into the Soul of Canada is a nonfiction book, written by Canadian writer Allan Casey, first published in November 2009 by Greystone Books. The book celebrates Canada's uniquely lake-rich landscape and explores the relationship that both the author and all Canadians have with this "Lakeland". In the book, the author chronicles his summer vacations to ten Canadian lakes. His tale begins at the cabin his father built on Saskatchewan's Emma Lake in 1960 and continues on a journey through ten of Canada's scenic lakes, extenuating their increasingly fragile existence as pristine lakes of Saskatchewan. It has been called an "extraordinary piece of writing", earning accolades of literary recognition.
Burning Down the House: Fighting Fires and Losing Myself is a non-fiction memoir, written by Canadian writer Russell Wangersky, first published in April 2009 by Thomas Allen Publishers. In the book, the author chronicles his experiences as a volunteer firefighter in Nova Scotia and Newfoundland.
Lost: A Memoir is a non-fiction memoir, written by Canadian writer Cathy Ostlere, first published in May 2008 by Key Porter Books. In the book, the author chronicles her feelings of guilt associated with her brother and his fiancée being declared "lost at sea". Ostlere had promised her brother not to divulge his plans for a sea voyage, and when his birthday in 1995 passed without the family receiving a call, she felt it was not particularly unusual of his character, and choose not to mention their secret. After weeks of no word, Ostlere admitted to her parents that she had knowledge of the seafaring plans. Soon after admitting this, it was determined that the couple were officially "lost at sea".
The Riverbones: Stumbling After Eden in the Jungles of Suriname is a non-fiction book, written by Canadian writer Andrew Westoll, first published in October 2008 by McClelland & Stewart. In the book, the author chronicles civil strife in Suriname. Westoll describes the modern struggles for human rights, ecological preservation, and the economic needs of the Suriname people. The Riverbones is called "a spellbinding tale of survival, heartbreak, mystery and murder".
Stardust is a non-fiction collection of memoirs and essays, written by Canadian writer Bruce Serafin, first published in October 2007 by New Star Books. The book, contains 20 writings from Serafin's youth; compiled after the authors death in 2007. Primarily the prose dishes harsh criticism at the establishment; in the authors style of candid and frank discourse. Serafin was honored posthumously for his work.
French Kiss: Stephen Harper's Blind Date with Quebec is a non-fiction book written by Chantal Hébert, a Canadian writer and columnist for the Toronto Star and Le Devoir, first published by Knopf Canada in April 2007. In the book, the author recounts the 2006 general election in the province of Quebec and the surprisingly strong performance of the Conservative Party in that region. Hébert describes the outcome as a "combination of Harper's tactical brilliance and Paul Martin's political ineptitude." The book presents complex issues in "clear and concise" prose. Hébert's enduring quality throughout the telling is objectivity, an increasingly rare trait amongst journalists.
The Only Snow in Havana is a non-fiction book, written by Canadian writer Elizabeth Hay, first published in September 1992 by Cormorant Books. In the book, the author chronicles an eight-year sojourn in which she traveled to Mexico, and through Cuba and Latin America, settling in New York until her return to Ottawa in 1992. Hay was homesick throughout her time away, and every new experience of her travels invoked reflections of home, which she recorded in her journal. Hay's journals resulted in a trilogy of books, of which, The Only Snow in Havana is the second.
Timely Death: Considering Our Last Rights is a non-fiction book, written by Canadian writer Anne Mullens, first published in May 1996 by Knopf Canada. In the book, the author chronicles medical advances and increased longevity in the context of the right to a dignified death. The book has been called a "well-researched and comprehensive book, written with compassion and clarity." Anne Mullens, covered the Sue Rodriguez story as a journalist for The Vancouver Sun and later for the Toronto Star. This was Mullens's inspiration for writing the book and she said "her attitude towards death changed during the course of writing it".
Sacré Blues: An Unsentimental Journey Through Quebec is a non-fiction book, written by Canadian writer Taras Grescoe, first published in 2000 by Macfarlane Walter & Ross. In the book, the author narrates his candid recollections of moving to Quebec in 1996. In describing "the rituals, eccentricities and customs of his new home", Kathryn Wardropper, award administrator for the Edna Staebler Award said, "It may infuriate some, but it is a landmark book that portrays the challenges and opportunities for modern Quebec."
Rolling Home: A Cross Canada Railroad Memoir is a non-fiction memoir, written by Canadian writer Tom Allen, first published in October 2001 by Penguin Books. In the book, the author chronicles his travels across Canada on a train. Allen includes his interviews with passengers, engineers, cooks, and porters. Rolling Home has been called an "evocative cross-country tour of Canada by train," by Staebler award administrator Kathryn Wardropper.
Into the Blue: Family Secrets and the Search for a Great Lakes Shipwreck is a non-fiction book, written by Canadian writer Andrea Curtis, first published in April 2003 by Random House Canada. In the book, the author narrates her family history and their connection to the 1906 shipwreck of the SS J.H. Jones, lost to the late-November swells of Ontario's Georgian Bay, claiming the lives of all on board. The ship's captain, Jim Crawford, left his one-year-old daughter, Eleanor, an orphan who faced a future of poverty. Curtis did not know the stigma her grandmother endured until researching the shipwreck, and discovering its links to her families past. Staebler Award administrator Kathryn Wardropper called the book "a thoroughly credible and enjoyable book".
After is a non-fiction book written by Canadian writer Francis Chalifour, first published in October 2005 by Tundra Books. In the book, the author narrates his pain and confusion as he grieved his father's death by suicide. Judith Miller, an award judge for the Edna Staebler Award called After, "deeply moving" saying, "We enjoyed the lyricism of his language and his strong sense of character."
Into the Abyss: How a Deadly Plane Crash Changed the Lives of a Pilot, a Politician, a Criminal and a Cop is a non-fiction book, written by the Canadian writer Carol Shaben, first published in September 2012 by Random House. The book's narrative chronicles the doomed flight of a Piper Navajo commuter plane, and the plight of four survivors as they endured the remote wilderness of northern Alberta where the plane had crashed.