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Lynn Coady

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Nationality
  
Canadian

Education
  
Carleton University

Role
  
Novelist


Name
  
Lynn Coady

Period
  
1990s-present

Awards
  
Scotiabank Giller Prize

Lynn Coady Giller Prize Lynn Coady wins for Hellgoing Toronto Star


Born
  
January 24, 1970 (age 54) Port Hawkesbury, Nova Scotia (
1970-01-24
)

Occupation
  
novelist, short story writer

Notable works
  
Strange Heaven, The Antagonist, Hellgoing

Notable awards
  
Scotiabank Giller Prize 2013 Hellgoing

Nominations
  
Governor General's Award for English-language fiction

Books
  
Hellgoing, The Antagonist, Strange Heaven, Mean Boy, Saints of Big Harbour

Giller prize winner lynn coady in studio q


Lynn Coady (born January 24, 1970) is a Canadian novelist and journalist.

Contents

Lynn Coady lynn coady Metro Writers in Residence

Lynn Coady | Interview


Life and career

Lynn Coady 2013 Hellgoing by Lynn Coady CBC Books CBC Radio

Coady was born and grew up in Port Hawkesbury, Nova Scotia. After high school, she attended Carleton University in Ottawa; after graduating, she moved to New Brunswick, where she worked at odd jobs for several years and began a career as a playwright. In 1996, she relocated to Vancouver, British Columbia, where she earned a Master of Fine Arts degree in creative writing from the University of British Columbia. In 2006 she moved to Edmonton and taught creative writing at Athabasca University where she developed a new course in writing the short story and in 2007 moved to Toronto to work at Anansi Press.

Lynn Coady ihuffpostcomgen1446488imagesoLYNNCOADYfac

Coady's first book, Strange Heaven (1998), was nominated for a Governor General's Award. The novel is set in Nova Scotia, giving Coady the opportunity to paint a different picture of her home province. Strange Heaven touches on the life of Bridget Murphy who has been admitted to a psychiatric ward after birthing a child whom was put up for adoption. Upon returning to her Cape Breton home Murphy sees everything and everyone in a different light but still manages to find solace in this bizarre and somewhat dysfunctional home.

Coady's second book, Play the Monster Blind (2000), was a national bestseller and a "Best Book" of 2000 for the Globe and Mail. Saints of Big Harbour (2002) was a Globe and Mail "Best Book" in 2002.

Mean Boy was recognized as a "Best Book" in 2006. The novel is a first person account of 19-year-old Lawrence Campbell during his first year of university in a small New Brunswick town. The year is 1975 and Campbell has dreams of becoming a poet. He was drawn away from his rural Prince Edward Island home by the allure of studying with his poet hero, Jim Arsenault, a character based on the real-life Canadian poet John Thompson who taught at Mount Allison University. As Campbell progresses through the year, much of Arsenault's shine wears off and Campbell learns that people are not always what one expects, but rather are complex and multi-dimensional.

Coady's 2011 novel The Antagonist concerns the life of Gordon Rankin, Coady's fictional character known more commonly in the novel as Rank. The character reflects how being cast as a hockey goon and tough guy impacted his life. In response to a novel written about him by an old university friend Rank dedicates himself to providing his own account of events from his past. The reader is brought into Rank's world and exposed to his hurts, joys, and ultimately the realization that one must narrate their own lives and reject the labels others may try to give you. This novel was shortlisted for the 2011 Scotiabank Giller Prize;.

Coady's 2013 book, Hellgoing is a collection of short stories, each about characters going through their own personal versions of hell. Despite this, the stories prompt laughing far more often than tears. When Hellgoing won the Scotiabank Giller Prize in November, 2013, Coady was living in Edmonton.

Coady has been awarded the Canadian Authors Association/Air Canada Award for the best writer under thirty, as well as the Dartmouth Book and Writing Award for fiction. Her articles and reviews have been featured in many publications, including Saturday Night, This Magazine, and Chatelaine. She has written several plays, and contributes regularly to The Globe and Mail.

In 2017, Coady was announced as juror for the 2017 Scotiabank Giller Prize.

Coady now lives in Toronto, Ontario.

References

Lynn Coady Wikipedia