ELIZABETH HAY has won the
2007 Scotiabank Giller Prize for Fiction for her third novel,
Late Nights on Air (McClelland & Stewart, 2007), beating literary heavyweights and former
Giller Prize winners
Michael Ondaatje and
M.G. Vassanji. The former radio journalist won the highest Canadian literary honour, the Canadian equivalent to the British Man Booker Prize, for a novel about a group of eccentrics working in a Canadian radio station in the 1970s.
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjVdFFhCUmDLHnlGIcUVsfxswAaO9rj4zOvKLpBQspclnXv0AUz8x7C3mTvSfPNU8Ntu-5Bv5ZQeXGVQmVsigfJbCErbqKuxaFNRqbBvgpIPC2mRbAHGxsk3ReimxLLbMceC2sH4g/s320/latenightsonair-elizabethhay.jpg)
The
Scotiabank Giller Prize is probably the leading Canadian prize for fiction and certainly the one with the most hoopla and dollars attached. Both novels and short-story collections are eligible for this prize.
Ondaatje has won the
Giller Prize once before while
Vassanji has won it twice before.
Ondaatje won in 2000 for
Anil’s Ghost;
Vassanji won in 1994 for
The Book of Secrets and in 2003 for
The In-Between World of Vikram Lall. Competing for the prestigious prize this year are the following authors and their novels:
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1.
Late Nights on Air (McClelland & Stewart, 2007) /
Elizabeth Hay2.
Divisadero (McClelland & Stewart, 2007) /
Michael Ondaatje3.
A Secret Between Us (trans. from the French by
Donald Winkler) (Douglas & McIntyre, 2007) /
Daniel Poliquin4.
The Assassin’s Song (Doubleday Canada, 2007) /
M.G. Vassanji5.
Effigy (Random House Canada, 2007) /
Alissa York
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