Ann Ireland | |
Birth Date: | 19 May 1953 |
Birth Place: | Toronto, Ontario, Canada |
Occupation: | Author |
Language: | English |
Alma Mater: | University of British Columbia |
Awards: | Seal First Novel Award Governor General's Award (shortlisted) Rogers Writers' Trust Award (shortlisted) |
Ann Ireland (1953–2018) was a Canadian fiction author who published five novels between 1985 and 2018.[1] Her first novel, A Certain Mr. Takahashi (1985), was the winner of the Seal $50,000 1st Novel Award. She also wrote 1996's The Instructor, which was shortlisted for the Trillium Book Award, and 2002's Exile, which was shortlisted for the 2002 Governor General's Awards and the Rogers Writers' Trust fiction prize.[2]
Ireland was born in Toronto, Ontario. She studied at the University of British Columbia, from which she earned a BFA in creative writing in 1976. She is a past president of PEN Canada[3] and for many years, up until the time of her death, was a writing instructor and the coordinator of the Writing Workshops Department at the Chang School of Continuing Education at Ryerson University (now Toronto Metropolitan University) in Toronto.[4] Her 1985 novel, A Certain Mr. Takahashi, was the basis for the 1991 feature film The Pianist.[5]
Her final novel, 2018's Where's Bob?, was published in May 2018, shortly before her death of carcinoid syndrome at the age of 65.[6]
Year | Title | Publisher | ISBN | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
1985 | A Certain Mr. Takahashi | McClelland and Stewart | Finalist, Books in Canada First Novel Award[7] | |
1996 | The Instructor[8] | Doubleday | Finalist, Ontario Trillium Award. Nominated for Barnes and Noble "Discover these Great New Writers" Award. | |
2002 | Exile | Dundurn Press | Fiction finalist, Governor General's Awards. Finalist for Rogers Writers' Trust Fiction Prize. Named by The Globe and Mail and Quill & Quire Magazine as a top book of the year. | |
2013 | The Blue Guitar | Dundurn Press | ||
2018 | Where's Bob? | Biblioasis | ||