The Writing department’s 2024 Victoria Book Prize finalists (from left): Tim Lilburn, Ali Blyth, Kathryn Mockler, Arleen Paré 

This year, October should be renamed the “Month of Mockler”, given how much Department of Writing professor Kathryn Mockler has been popping up. Not only was she announced as a shortlister for — and eventual winner of — the City of Victoria Butler Book Prize (more on that later), but she was also one of three jurors for the 2024 Governor General’s Literary Award for Poetry, appeared as part of the Wild Prose literary roundtable “Alice in Monsterland: Alice Munro and other ‘art monsters’” and was one of the featured readers at the Department of Writing’s Faculty Reading Night.

But it was her Butler Book Prize win for her new story collection Anecdotes which really gave her cause to celebrate.

Named the winner at the annual public gala at the Union Club on October 16, Mockler was originally announced as a finalist alongside recently retired Writing professor Tim Lilburn (Numinous Seditions: Interiority and Climate Change) plus Writing alumni Ali Blythe (Stedfast) and Arleen Paré (Absence of Wings), as well as local poet Shō Yamagushiku (Shima).

It was a notable indicator of excellence that four of the five finalists were connected to our Writing department and, in her acceptance speech, Mockler noted that she was “humbled to be in the company of these finalists and their beautiful books”.

Prize money to charity  

While the win may have been a surprise to the author, her donation of the $5,000 prize money to three local charities was likely a surprise to the event’s audience. Yet such a move was not surprising for Mockler, who describes the act of writing as being “inherently political”.

“No matter how solitary the act of writing can feel, a writer is always addressing a collective, shared world — describing, analyzing, critiquing, redefining and expanding it. Writers cannot ignore the world that shapes their words nor the world that receives them,” she noted in her acceptance speech.

“In Anecdotes, I use personal experiences to grapple with violence, oppression and the climate crisis, and I am accepting this award at a time in which a genocide is being perpetrated by Israel against Palestinians with the support of the US, Canada and many European states—the same colonial forces responsible for the genocide of Indigenous Peoples across Turtle Island.

“While Canada makes me complicit in these crimes through its arms sales and moral failure, I am deeply grateful to the judges and the Victoria Butler Book Prize for enabling me to donate the entirety of this award money to the following:

She concluded by saying, “I encourage anyone appalled by these atrocities to seek out groups like ArmsEmbargoNow and World Beyond War.”

About Anecdotes

Mockler’s sixth book, Anecdotes is her latest collection of characteristically disruptive writing (see also the 2020 anthology Watch Your Head: Writers and Artists Respond to the Climate Crisis, which she co-edited) and is described as a hybrid collection of “dreamlike stories and dark humour” which examines the pressing realities of sexual violence, abuse and environmental collapse.

A finalist for four other awards (2023 Danuta Gleed Literary Award, 2024 Trillium Book Award, 2024 Fred Kerner Book Award, 2024 VMI Betsy Warland Between Genres Award), Anecdotes was also recently reviewed in subTerrain Magazine.