Lifestyle
One of these novelists will receive the $150K Carol Shields Prize
Here’s the shortlist of authors for the Carol Shields Prize for Fiction. The winner will be announced in Toronto on May 13th.
McClelland & Stewart/Random House/Doubleday Canada/SJP Lit
hide caption
toggle caption
McClelland & Stewart/Random House/Doubleday Canada/SJP Lit
Here’s the shortlist of authors for the Carol Shields Prize for Fiction. The winner will be announced in Toronto on May 13th.
McClelland & Stewart/Random House/Doubleday Canada/SJP Lit
The Carol Shields Prize is a newcomer in the world of literary awards. It’s also one of the most generous. The winner will receive $150,000 and a residency with Fogo Island Inn in Newfoundland, Canada. Each of the four runner-ups will receive $12,500.
The winner of the 2024 Carol Shields Prize, the second annual award, will be announced on May 13. Here’s shortlist:
Birnam Wood by Eleanor Catton
In this eco-thriller, a guerilla gardening collective named ‘Birnam Wood’ (after Macbeth) meets an American billionaire. In his review for WHYY’s Fresh Air, John Powers writes, “this New Zealand-set book is a witty literary thriller about the collision between eco-idealism and staggering wealth.”
Daughter by Claudia Dey
Protagonist Mona Dean is a playwright, actor and daughter of an insecure man who is famous for one great novel. The Carol Shields Prize describes Daughter as “exposing painful truths about art, family, and systemic inequities” and “a study of intimate manipulations and the trope of the male genius.”
Coleman Hill by Kim Coleman Foote
Foote’s debut novel is partly based on her own family history. In the early 1900s, two Black women quit the Jim Crow south and head for New Jersey. “Gripping, poetic, and with a big heart,” writes Publishers Weekly, “it’s a memorable work of grim determination and surprising optimism.”
A History of Burning by Janika Oza
Oza’s historical fiction draws from President Idi Amin’s forced expulsion of more than 50,000 South Asians from Uganda in 1972. Her debut novel follows four generations of one family over continents and the course of nearly a century. “An ambitious family drama skillfully explores the bonds of kinship and the yearning for peace and security,” writes Kirkus Reviews.
Brotherless Night by V. V. Ganeshananthan
“What makes a person become a terrorist?” writes Emiko Tamagawa, senior producer of Here & Now. “This book explores that question through the eyes of Sashi, a young Tamil woman growing up in a Sri Lanka on the edge of civil war. I was completely engrossed in this novel; reading it made the story of the Tamil Tigers and the bloody conflict in Sri Lanka real to me in a way they hadn’t been before.”
Celebrating women and non-binary writers
The winner of the second Carol Shields Prize will be announced on May 13 during a live event in Toronto hosted by Pulitzer Prize-winning poet, writer, and Carol Shields Prize Foundation board director Natasha Trethewey.
Named for Pulitzer Prize-winning writer Carol Shields, the award recognizes “creativity and excellence in fiction by women and non-binary writers in Canada and the United States” according to its website. Shields, who died in 2003 at the age of 68, was best known for The Stone Diaries.
The first recipient of the prize was Fatimah Asghar for their debut novel When We Were Sisters.
This story was edited by Meghan Sullivan.
Lifestyle
‘The Rest of Our Lives’ takes readers on a midlife crisis road trip
The midlife crisis remains a rich vein for novelists, even as its sufferers skew ever older.
In Ben Markovits’ 12th novel,The Rest of Our Lives — which was a finalist for this year’s Booker Prize — the narrator, 55-year-old Tom Layward, is trying to figure out what to do with his remaining time on this mortal coil. With his youngest child headed off to college, his health faltering, and both his marriage and law school teaching position on the rocks, he feels blocked by “undigested emotional material.”
So, what does he do? In the great American tradition, Markovits’ wayward Layward hits the road. After dropping off his daughter at college, he heads west into his past and what may be his sunset.
America’s literary highways are not quite bumper-to-bumper, but they are plenty crowded with middle-aged runaways fleeing lives that increasingly feel like a bad fit. Many are women, including the heroines of Anne Tyler’s Ladder of Years and Miranda July’s All Fours. But there are men, too, like the hero of John Updike’s Rabbit, Run — the granddaddy of midlife crisis novels — which serves as a sort of template for Markovits’ novel (and, tellingly, is the subject of his narrator’s abandoned doctoral dissertation, which he tossed aside for the more dependable employment prospects of a law degree after meeting his “unusually beautiful” future wife, Amy.)
We meet Tom and Amy on the cusp of empty nesting. This is not a happy prospect. Tom has been biding his time for the last dozen years, since he learned of Amy’s affair with a guy she knew from synagogue. This happened back when their daughter, Miriam, was six, and her older brother, Michael, was 12.
Their marriage has not improved in the intervening years. The early pages of this novel, a countdown of the Laywards’ last few days as a family unit before Miri matriculates, recalls an old magazine feature: “Can this marriage be saved?” One would think not. Amy, forever trying to provoke a reaction from her impassive husband, jabs repeatedly, “You really don’t care about anything, do you?”
Tom observes that staying in a long marriage requires acceptance of reduced expectations. He notes wryly: “It’s like being a Knicks fan.” (Like Markovits and Updike’s Rabbit Angstrom, Tom is a former basketball player. Amusingly, his description of each character includes a height estimate.)
Driving west, Tom has plenty of time to ponder his disappointments, and Amy’s. He notes that she had hoped he’d be more ambitious; she wanted him to accept a lucrative offer from a top litigation firm that would have paid for private school for their kids. Instead, Amy says, he chose to stay in his “dead end” job at Fordham Law, where he teaches a controversial class on hate crime. He is currently in hot water for his legal input for the defense in a case against an NBA owner for racial allegations. Amy’s take: “Tom loves to stand up for racists.”
Tom’s road trip takes him on a desultory odyssey visiting old friends and family. He finds their lives disheartening. In Pittsburgh, a grad school friend who became an English professor teaches “dead white men” and is having an affair with a graduate student. In South Bend, his younger brother is distressed over limited access to his kids after a divorce. In Denver, a college teammate urges him to see a guy at UCLA who wants to bring a case about systemic discrimination against white American basketball players.
His old high school girlfriend, who leads a busy life in Las Vegas as a single, late-life parent, urges him to steer clear of the case. When she also tries to talk about his alarming health symptoms (puffiness, breathlessness), he stonewalls her. “I forgot what you’re like,” she tells him, eerily echoing Amy. “You don’t really care about anything.”
At each stop, Tom tries to put a good face on his trip by telling his hosts that he’s thinking of writing a book about pickup basketball across the country. He also confesses, “I may have left Amy.” “You may?” his brother says.
Tom exacerbates Amy’s longtime presentiment of abandonment by ignoring most of her calls. Periodically, he checks in late at night, and they circle around what’s going on. “God, you’re cold,” she says when his explanations leave her wanting. His response? “Okay.” When he confides that he’s feeling “a little adrift…I can’t seem to get a grip on anything,” she surprises him by responding, “Me neither.” It’s a start.
In a 2006 interview with Yale Daily News, Markovits’ alma mater, he said, “I like to write about what it is like to become happier, although no one has ever been able to spot happiness in my books.”
You don’t have to look too hard to spot glimmers of happiness behind the missteps and misconnects in this ultimately moving probe of life, love, family and marriage across years and miles.
Lifestyle
Guess Who This Racing Enthusiast Is!
Guess Who
This Racing Enthusiast Is!
Published
TMZ.com
Sure, being an actor’s a dream job for plenty of folks out there, but even actors have their own dream jobs … can you guess who this racing enthusiast is?
We ran into this guy while he was hanging out with fans on Hollywood Boulevard, and he gushed about his admiration for pro racers … the ones not on light cycles, of course!
Still, he admitted he wouldn’t be up to the task of switching lanes and moving from acting into racing … take a spin at guessing who!
Lifestyle
Springsteen’s label was about to drop him. Then came ‘Born to Run’
Biographer Peter Ames Carlin describes the making of Born to Run as an “existential moment” for Springsteen. Carlin’s book is Tonight in Jungleland. Originally broadcast Aug. 7, 2025.
Hear the Original Interview
Music
Springsteen’s label was about to drop him. Then came ‘Born to Run’
-
Massachusetts1 week agoMIT professor Nuno F.G. Loureiro, a 47-year-old physicist and fusion scientist, shot and killed in his home in Brookline, Mass. | Fortune
-
New Mexico1 week agoFamily clarifies why they believe missing New Mexico man is dead
-
Culture1 week agoTry This Quiz and See How Much You Know About Jane Austen
-
Connecticut23 hours agoSnow Accumulation Estimates Increase For CT: Here Are The County-By-County Projections
-
World7 days agoPutin says Russia won’t launch new attacks on other countries ‘if you treat us with respect’
-
Entertainment2 days agoPat Finn, comedy actor known for roles in ‘The Middle’ and ‘Seinfeld,’ dies at 60
-
Minneapolis, MN1 week agoMinneapolis man is third convicted in Coon Rapids triple murder
-
Maine1 week agoFamily in Maine host food pantry for deer | Hand Off