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Priscila Uppal, creative writing professor at York, is one of three Canadian poets shortlisted for the Griffin Poetry Prize, the richest poetry prize in the world.
Priscila Uppa Uppal heard that she made the Canadian shortlist on Tuesday, when Scott Griffin, Canadian founder of The Griffin Trust For Excellence In Poetry, and David Young, trustee, announced the three Canadian and four international finalists. The $100,000 prize is divided annually between writers of the two best books of poetry published in English (including translations) in the previous year.l "I feel fantastic," said Uppal over the phone on Wednesday. "I am extremely happy. I am extremely proud. I am absolutely thrilled," said the author of four previous collections of poetry and a novel. "I was caught by surprise," said Uppal. The coordinator of the Faculty of Arts' Creative Writing Program was in her Vanier College office when her publisher from Exile Editions called with the stunning news. Before she could tell anyone, she had to rush across the green to teach her poetry writing class, where she blurted her good fortune. She couldn’t have had a better audience – 15 aspiring Wordsworths who dream of winning this very prize in years to come. They clapped and cheered. "They all hope to end up in my shoes," laughed Uppal. The judges – distinguished poets John Burnside from Scotland, Charles Simic from the United States and Karen Solie from Canada – read 483 books of poetry submitted by publishers from 15 countries for the seventh annual competition. In Ontological Necessities, states her publisher, Uppal investigates the emotional and philosophical struggle fundamental to notions of being in the 21st century. From poems that explore questions of identity to those that attempt to examine human relationships amid the onslaught of horrors depicted daily in the news, the collection uses surrealist and absurdist language in subversive and startling ways to grapple with the increasingly absurd world we all occupy. The Griffin Poetry Prize judges were impressed. Here’s their citation:
Uppal earned two degrees from York – a BA in English and creative writing in 1997 and a PhD in English in 2004. She has written four other collections of poetry: How to Draw Blood From a Stone (1998), Confessions of A Fertility Expert (1999), Pretending to Die (2001) and Live Coverage (2003) (see the Sept. 23, 2003 issue of Ylife). Her novel, The Divine Economy of Salvation, was published in 2002 in Canada and the US, and translated into Dutch and Greek. Her poetry has been translated into Korean, Croatian, Latvian and Italian. Uppal and the six other Griffin Poetry Prize finalists will be invited to read in Toronto at the MacMillan Theatre on June 5. The two winners, who each receive $50,000, will be announced on June 6. For more information, a list of international finalists, and to order tickets to the readings, visit the Griffin Poetry Prize Web site.
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Priscila Uppal shortlisted
Uppal’s book Ontological Necessities is up against Ken Babstock’s Airstream Land Yacht and Don McKay’s Strike/Slip for the $50,000 prize going to a Canadian poet.
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