Michelle Good among Canadian winners of 2024 High Plains Book Awards | CBC Books - Action News
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Michelle Good among Canadian winners of 2024 High Plains Book Awards

The awards recognize regional literary works about life on the High Plains in North America.

The awards recognize regional literary works about life on the High Plains in North America

A woman with long whit hair looking at the ground a short distance ahead of her. She is wearing a periwinkle shirt with a beaded collar.
Michelle Good is a Cree writer and lawyer, as well as a member of Red Pheasant Cree Nation in Saskatchewan. (Silk Sellinger Photography)

Canada Reads-winning authorMichelle Good is among the Canadian writers to take home a 2024 High Plains Book Award.

Established in 2006, the annual awards recognize regional authors and/or literary works that examine and reflect life on the High Plains in North America. The regions include the Canadian provinces Manitoba, Alberta and Saskatchewan and the American Statesof North Dakota, South Dakota, Montana, Wyoming, Nebraska, Colorado and Kansas.

The award program recognizes books in 13 categories, including nonfiction, fiction, poetry, children's books, photography and short stories.

The award winners each receive $500 and a commemorative plaque.

Good won the Indigenous writer category for her bookTruth Telling:Seven Conversations about Indigenous Life in Canada.

InTruth Telling,Goodexplores many issues that are currently affecting Indigenous people in Canadawhile incorporating her own experience and family's legacy in seven personal essays.

She contextualizes contemporary discussions about reconciliation, the emergence of Indigenous narratives and more through historical knowledge, essentially providing a resource to mobilize Indigenous and non-Indigenous Canadians alike into active change.

Good is a Cree writer and retired lawyer, as well as a member of Red Pheasant Cree Nation in Saskatchewan.Five Little Indians, her first book, won the2020 Governor General's Literary Award for fictionandthe 2021 Amazon Canada First Novel Award.

It alsowonCanada Reads2022, when it was championed by Ojibway fashion journalistChristian Allaire.

A white-coloured book cover with Indigenous art that shows a drawing of a turtle. There is maroon and black colour text overlay that is the book's title and author's name.
LISTEN | Michelle Good discusses her essay collectionTruth Telling:
Michelle Good on her essay collection Truth Telling: Seven Conversations about Indigenous Life in Canada.

Calgary-based high school student Charlotte Bellows also won a prize: the First Book award. She is recognized for her memoirThe Definition of Beautifulthat follows her own coming-of-age story. Between the ages of 15 and 17,she recoveredfrom an eating disorder. The book explores this journey along with all the consequences it had brought into her life with the added difficulty of living througha global pandemic.

American Canadian writer and technology reporterVauhini Varawon the short storyprize for her collectionThis isSalvaged, whichoffers an intimate portrayal of grief and girlhood. Itexamines the lives of girls and women experiencing loss and alienation.

LISTEN | Vauhini Vara on exploring the lives of girls and women experiencing loss:
In her debut story collection, the Saskatchewan-born author of bestselling novel The Immortal King Rao examines the lives of girls and women experiencing loss and alienation.

Here is the full list of Canadian winners:

First Book

Indigenous Writer

Short Stories

  • This Is Salvagedby Vauhini Vara

Young Reader/Middle Grade

  • Coyote Queenby Jessica Vitalis

Art & Photography

  • Prairie Interlaceby Michele Hardy, Timothy Long, and Julia Krueger

Visit the High Plains Book Awards'websitefor the full list of winners.

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