Last year I read 11 of the longlisted titles for The Carol Shields Prize for Fiction and with the recent announcement of the 2024 longlist I was prompted to reflect on 2023’s selections.
Three of the short story collections I’ve already written about—Talia Laksmni Kolluri’s What We Fed to the Manticore (shortlisted), Andrea Barrett’s Natural History (longlisted), and Francine Cunningham’s God Isn’t Here Today (longlisted)—in the Autumn quarterly.
Two standout reads for me consider themes of belonging. First, Daphne Palasi Andreades’ Brown Girls (shortlisted) which hooked me straight away with voice and style. “Brown girls singing, jumping, spinning. Brown girls screeching Mariah at the top of their lungs, cackling in the school courtyard, playing handball, talking smack. You can see that, at the sentence level, there are echoes and exclamations that pull readers by a thread into the story. It held my attention throughout.
Tsering Yangzom Lama’s We Measure the Earth with Our Bodies (longlisted) was every bit as compelling. I’d read it the previous fall when it landed on the Giller Prize longlist. It’s longer, so I had time to grow more attached to the characters (four voices) and to feel connected to the settings (partly 1950s Tibet after China’s invasion, partly Toronto, decades later). “A smile spreads across my face as the sky rearranges its clouds. It occurs to me that the sky does this, day and night, whether we notice or not. The earth, too, rearranges itself, and all of us on it. Why don’t we let it?” The structure requires some attention; patient readers are rewarded.
Questions about belonging are also key to Alexis Schaitkin’s Elsewhere (shortlisted) but that’s not immediately clear. At first, there’s just a general sense of unease and, then, questions arise. “It felt less like we were building something stone upon stone, than like we were uncovering it, a structure hidden in the forest, pulling away the moss and ferns to find what had been waiting there.” For others who seek out stories about mothers and daughters, there’s a lot to like here. But the characters’ shared sense of seeking is so pervasive that readers remain at a distance: observers, apart, alone.
Suzette Mayr’s The Sleeping Car Porter (shortlisted) is set in 1929, on a train where Baxter’s working as a porter. His work is a grind and an affront, but Mayr’s so skilled that his daily chores reflect historical inequities—class and race—and even as the hours in his shifts drag, the pages turn quickly. “Baxter clicks on a smile. Helps passengers board, then settles their bags, wraps, and hats. Answers questions about the speed of the train. Yes, he says for the seven hundred and thirty-three thousand and fifty-eighth time, the fastest train across the continent.” There were a couple of laugh-out-loud moments for me here, too, and I gobbled the book so quickly that I barely had time to flag a few pages.
Emma Hooper’s We Should Not Be Afraid of the Sky (longlisted) is set at the height of the Roman Empire and told through a chorus of voices. I enjoyed her debut novel, Our Homesick Songs, for its lyricism and accessibility, with sentences like this to charm me: “Without clocks or people to pace it out, the darkness spread out and out like the sea, like she could sink into it, away.” But although those qualities are evident here, too, I found the sense of present-day thinking pulled me out of this ancient story of persistence and resistance, power and desire. It reminded me of Rivka Galchen’s Everyone Knows Your Mother is a Witch, another whose description seemed a perfect match but left me unmoored, careening between historical and contemporary elements.
With Kali Fajardo-Anstine’s work, I quite liked her debut Sabrina & Corina but I felt as though she was more at home with Woman of Light (longlisted), her characters free to stretch and grow. “The first time Avel had kissed Luz, a rainbow trout leapt from the water and smacked against a boulder before flopping into the foam line. Luz gasped and Avel figured the breathlessness was for him, or at least that’s what she let him believe.” Although the cover illustration hints at the importance of the setting and the characters’ relationship to home, place, and the land, it doesn’t depict the sense of connection and the importance of relationships in the story.
The past plays an important role in Namwali Serpell’s The Furrows (longlisted) as the story revolves around grief and loss, a sense of being stuck. “Me, every time: ‘I felt him die. I know he’s dead.’ My mother, every time: ‘Where is he? What really happened that day?’ My father, one time, when he’d finally had enough: “Why does it matter? Either way, the boy’s gone.’” It’s an uncomfortable but tender story, as she spirals around her brother’s absence; and, then, the narrative hinges, as she finds another way of coping. Tone and style shift, reflecting her new reality, reminding us how vulnerable we are when we are mourning, but also how that openness contains new possibilities.
There are some similarities with Fatima Asghar’s When We Were Sisters, which ultimately won the 2023 prize. But in Asghar’s novel, even the structure represents the fractures caused by reality shifting too rapidly. It’s a disjointed reading experience, which reflects the sense that nothing is trustworthy, everything is eroding a sense of stability and a sense of trust. “Their wails scatter throughout the entire house, frothing like windows, filling the stove, painting the walls. Their wails everywhere, turning our house into a House of Sadness.” Readers are supposed to feel as though the story is folding in on itself, which is such an interesting experiment that I lost touch with some of the moving aspects of the story, but I remain curious about her next books.
Because I haven’t read the entire longlist, I can’t say which of the books I would have chosen as my personal and inaugural winner of the prize, but there were certainly plenty of strong contenders, so I hope to find some new favourites on the longlist for this year too.
In a couple days, I’ll write about the books I’d previously read on the 2024 longlist and, in a couple more, I’ll write about the books I’m reading now.
This prize list is one that if I had more time, I would read all the way through, because no doubt there are many gems on it. I still haven’t gotten around to Mayr’s book, even though I say I will, and have been for the past two years. Sigh. She probably lives here in my neighborhood for all I know – it feels extra shameful that I haven’t read a fellow Calgarian that’s been so highly lauded for this book!
The Women’s Fiction Prize still brings more “new” readers into my stacks, but I appreciate how easily one can access (in North America) the nominees for the CSP list. It’s still early days for the prize; it remains to be seen whether it will be more Governor-Generals-ish or more Writers-Trust-ish in its nature. I hear you: some books are just intimidating and get relegated to the bottom of the stack despite best intentions! Maybe it could be your one-and-only 2025 reading goal? hee hee #highhopes
Hey, Anne, I’ve been getting this error message when I leave comments on your blog-“Nonce verification failed”-but I know several people are having problems with filters, so I thought I should mention something, in case other people might also have comments getting redirected to the folder-that-shall-not-be-named!
Some of those 2023 books sound really interesting. The 2024 longlist looks interesting too and reminds me that I still haven’t read Birnam Wood and I really want to.
Maybe the audio for Birnam Wood would be an option: it might even seem a little shorter if enjoyed while doing chores as a change from your podcast-listening.
The only one I’ve read from the 2023 list was the Suzette Mayr, which I loved and would have been happy to see it win–but as you note, it’s not un-celebrated as is. This Gish Jen has been on my radar because I liked her stories in the New Yorker.
Plus, the shortlist for the Impac too. Yes, I’d like to read that collection; I’ve consistently enjoyed her and, yet, haven’t persistently pursued reading her.
I absolutely loved Brown Girls – such an ambitious narrative style executed so well, and so effective. You’e whetted my appetite further for The Sleeping Car Porter. Looking forward to seeing what you think of the 2024 longlist.
I think the length of Brown Girls really worked for it: a great decision.
I’ve even been thinking of rereading Porter; it’s not been very long since my first read, but it’s just so good.
I loved Brown Girls and would have been happy to see it win. Then again, it was the only book from the longlist that I read in its entirety! (I only managed 78 pages in the Serpell and the others I had no way to access.) I disliked Hooper’s debut novel, Etta and Otto and Russell and James, so was disinclined to try her again. Otherwise, there’s a lot here that does vaguely attract me, but whether it will be enough to get me seeking out these now-backlist reads I’m not sure.
I’d’ve been happy with that outcome too, but Suzette Mayr’s writing is outstanding and Baxter was so fully realised that I was rooting for her and for him (yes, I know he’s imaginary…they won the Giller though)!
I’m glad you’ve got access to all the titles this year; hopefully 2025 is just as accessible for you.
I’m not sure I’d read another of Hooper’s, although others (including Naomi!) absolutely loved this story. (And so many loved that Rivka Galchen book, which also didn’t work for me, even though I loved her short fiction debut.)
You might really like Elsewhere, but I’m not hearing any of the others call out your name.
I did love Hooper’s book! There was just something about it that made me want to keep reading. I haven’t read either of her others, but they sound much different from this one.
It’s pretty action packed, so I can see that. Which always surprises me about these older settings (for no good reason, obviously)!
I did thorough research for this comment on 8 books I haven’t read nor even heard of. Audible has only Brown Girls, and at 4 hours it’s too short, I buy only long books. There were a number of Elsewheres including one upcoming by Keanu Reeves (and China Mieville). I’ll give that one a miss. The closest I got to something I knew about was “Asghar was nominated for the 2023 Young Lions Fiction Award …, which was ultimately won by Zain Khalid’s Brother Alive”
I really appreciate your curiosity! But I’m not sure I’d suggest anything other than Brown Girls for you and given how many hours of listening you have to plan for, I wouldn’t use a credit for it either, so unless you could borrow it from the library? It’s funny that you did, eventually, find a connection though. And that it was from our UKLG prizelist reading for last year! I noticed, too, just how many Elsewhere titles there are, when I was looking for the cover image. None of them got added to my TBR either…although I didn’t see the Mieville!