The 1998 Giller Prize - Jury Panel
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Margaret Atwood is the author of more than twenty-five
books - novels, short stories, poetry, literary criticism, social history,
and books for children. Her work has been published around the world and
has won many awards including the Governor-General's Award, the Trillium
Book Award, and the Sunday Times Award for Literary Excellence in the
U.K., and the prestigious Le Chevalier dans l'Ordre des Arts et des Lettres
in France. She won the 1996 Giller Prize for her most recent novel, Alias
Grace, which was also shortlisted for the 1996 Booker Prize, the 1996
Governor-General's Award for Fiction, the Orange Prize for Fiction, and
just this month, for the International IMPAC Dublin literary award, the
world's richest book prize. She lives in Toronto.
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Peter Gzowski has worked primarily as a broadcaster since
1971 and is best known for his 15 years as the host of CBC Radio's former
flagship program "Morningside." "Peter Gzowski's Forum" now airs every
Friday on CBC Radio One, and on CBC Television, "Gzowski in Conversation"
is scheduled to make its on-air debut on April 26. Peter Gzowski has also
published twelve books, most recently The Morningside Years, and is the
founder of the Peter Gzowski Invitational Golf Tournaments, which have
raised $5 million for literacy. An Officer of the Order of Canada, the
recipient of a Governor-General's Performing Arts Award, the winner of
seven ACTRA Awards, and the recipient of the George Peabody Award for
his Outstanding Contribution to Broadcasting, Peter Gzowski is serving
his second year as a jury member. He lives in Toronto.
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Guy Vanderhaeghe published his first collection of short
stories, Man Descending, in 1982. That book won the Governor-General's
Award for Fiction and, in Britain, the Geoffrey Faber Memorial Prize.
Guy Vanderhaeghe is also the co-winner of the 1990 City of Toronto Book
Award for his novel Homesick, and his play I Had A Job I Liked. Once.
won the Canadian Authors Association Prize for the best drama published
in 1993. His most recent publications are a play, Dancock's Dance,
and a novel, The Englishman's Boy, which won the 1996 Governor-General's
Award for Fiction, The Saskatchewan Book Award for Fiction, and The Saskatchewan
Book of the Year Award. That novel was also shortlisted for The Giller
Prize in 1996 and has recently been nominated for the International IMPAC
Dublin Literary Award. Guy Vanderhaeghe lives in Saskatoon.
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