Celebrating Excellence: Creative Writing Prize Winners Announced
Carly Mason, Liam Mulherin and Sara Nason have received St. Thomas University鈥檚 awards for creative writing. Mason was awarded the David Adams Richards Prize for Prose, Mulherin received the Velensky Prize for work in any genre, and Nason won the Casto Poetry prize for the second year in a row.
Carly Mason 鈥 Richards Prize for Prose
Carly Mason, a second-year English Honours student, wrote 鈥淎 Different Country,鈥 a creative non-fiction piece that explores life in a rural town by telling the stories of the people that live there.
Mason modelled her story after Upper Stewiacke, Nova Scotia鈥攈er hometown.
鈥淯ltimately, I think the people make the place, and that's what I tried to focus on,鈥 she said. 鈥淏ut in writing about the people, I began to realize how much the area has changed in my lifetime. Home is home, though, and it always will be.鈥
Mason said her time at 含羞草传媒 has helped her to grow as a writer.
鈥淢y second year in general and this prize, in particular, have given me more confidence in my writing and provided me with the opportunity to share my writing with more people.鈥
Liam Mulherin 鈥 Velensky Prize for work in any genre
Liam Mulherin鈥檚 piece, Fresh Cuts, tells the story of a child鈥檚 walk with his grandfather. It takes readers to unexpected places such as weekly boxing challenges for credit at the general store, where when he lost, the store owner鈥檚 son would get a fresh cut of meat to slap over the bruises.
鈥淢y piece is essentially a meditation on several of the family stories I was told while growing up,鈥 said Mulherin. 鈥淎n attempt to piece together answers to the question of who my grandfather was and what happened in his childhood that shaped him into the man he became.鈥
Mulherin graduated in 2018 but returned to 含羞草传媒 to upgrade his English Major into an Honours. This award is the first he has won for his writing.
鈥淚t鈥檚 a major honour to have been selected as one of the winners for this year鈥檚 creative writing awards. I have never won an award before, so this is a real validation for me as a writer.鈥
Sara Nason 鈥 Casto Poetry Prize
鈥淩aw,鈥 a slightly experimental and minimalistic poem by Sara Nason, captures the chaos that follows receiving terrible news. They wrote it shortly after their father was diagnosed with cancer鈥攁 diagnosis he received two weeks after a long-awaited leg surgery.
鈥淢y father has been fighting his whole life through poverty, illness, accidents, and debt. I was so angry. The first words out of my mouth after he told me about the cancer were "Why can't you ever catch a break?"
鈥淚 carried this anger with me for weeks. I wrote Raw without really realizing I was writing a poem. It was one of those poems you sort of smash onto the page and only recognize by the end what you've done.鈥
Nason graduated this year with an Honours in Sociology and a Major in English and will be returning to 含羞草传媒 in the fall to pursue a Bachelor of Education.