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The award's official name was also changed at that time to the Scotiabank Giller Prize. In 2006, the prize instituted a longlist for the first time, comprising no fewer than 10 and no more than 15 titles. In 2008, the prize fund was increased to $50,000 for the winning author and $5,000 for each of the authors on the shortlist.
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It won the Scotiabank Giller Prize, and was shortlisted for the Amazon First Novel Prize, the Toronto Book Award, and longlisted for the Dublin Literary Award for the best work of global fiction. [2] [9] [10] It was published in the United States by Europa Books, in the United Kingdom by Dialogue Books, and translated into Italian.
The next book in his cycle, Days by Moonlight (Quincunx 5) was published in 2019, winning Alexis his second Rogers Writers' Trust Fiction Prize. [20] The book was also longlisted for the 2019 Giller Prize. [21] While promoting the book, Alexis suggested that after the final part of the cycle had been published, he would revise the entire cycle ...
Giller Prize–winning works ... Indies Choice Book Award–winning works ... (9 P) J. J. Anthony Lukas Book Prize–winning works (11 P) James Fenimore Cooper Prize ...
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The award was judged by novelist David Adams Richards, author Joan Clark, and journalist Robert Fulford. [8] It also won the Trillium Book Award and became the first book to have won all the three awards. [4] Wright had earlier received nominations for both the Giller Prize and the Governor General's Award in 1995 for his novel The Age of Longing.
Published in 2011, Half-Blood Blues was shortlisted for that year's Man Booker Prize, [5] Scotiabank Giller Prize, [6] Rogers Writers' Trust Fiction Prize, [7] and Governor General's Award for English-language fiction. [8] Edugyan was one of two Canadian writers, alongside Patrick deWitt, to make all four award lists in 2011. [6] [9]