TORONTO -- First-time novelist Ian Williams singled out a special member of the audience as he accepted the $100,000 Scotiabank Giller Prize -- Canadian literary icon Margaret Atwood.
Williams choked back tears as he took to the stage to receive the honour at a glitzy Toronto gala on Monday night for "Reproduction."
"I've got notes here for people I need to thank, but maybe I'll just start with my heart first," Williams told the crowd. "Margaret Atwood over there is the first book I bought with my own money at a bookstore in Brampton."
In an interview after the ceremony, Williams said the shoutout felt like a small token of the debt he owes Atwood, having spent his childhood summers holed up with her poetry.
"How do you tell a writer that I feel like I've known you and you've been like my literary mother and you've been here for me this whole time?" Williams told The Canadian Press.
"I'm sure a lot of people feel this exact way about her, and she gives us this sense of pride as well. It's just so much she's done for this country."
"Reproduction," published by Random House Canada, traces the ties that bind a cross-cultural chosen family in Williams' hometown of Brampton, Ont.
The tale begins when a sober-minded teenager from a small island nation and the listless heir to a German family fortune meet in the hospital room where their mothers lay dying.
From there, Williams unspools a narrative so entangled it strains against novelistic convention.
Jury members praised Williams for his "masterful unfolding of unexpected connections and collisions between and across lives otherwise separated by race, class, gender and geography."
Still dazed from the win, Williams said it seemed like "all my pasts are alive in this moment. " He simultaneously felt like a six-year-old child in Trinidad, a nine-year-old boy going to school in Brampton, a university student and professor, and a 40-year-old writer being feted by some of Canada's foremost literary figures.
"I feel like I'm with the people that I care about and I feel like all of those people are right here in me," said Williams. "It's almost like when you're surrounded by family, but it's just yourself. It's just your own history."
Williams beat out returning Giller nominees David Bezmozgis, Michael Crummey Alix Ohlin and Steven Price, as well as fellow newcomer Megan Gail Coles.
The six finalists were picked from a long list of nominees, and titles by two former Giller winners didn't make the final cut -- Andre Alexis' "Days by Moonlight" and Atwood's "The Testaments," her blockbuster sequel to 1985's "The Handmaid's Tale."
While "Reproduction" marks his debut novel, Williams has been a rising star in poetry circles. His 2013 collection, "Personals," was shortlisted for the Griffin Poetry Prize and the Robert Kroetsch Poetry Book Award.
He also conquered short fiction with his collection, "Not Anyone's Anything," which won the Danuta Gleed Literary Award in 2012.
Williams was the 2014-2015 writer-in-residence in the University of Calgary's distinguished writers program, and has held numerous other fellowships and residencies.
The Vancouver-based writer is currently a Griffin Poetry Prize trustee and associate professor of poetry in University of British Columbia's creative writing program.
Before the Giller winner was announced, a who's who of Canada's cultural scene walked the Giller red carpet at the Four Seasons Hotel in Toronto.
Giller executive director Elana Rabinovitch said this year's short list was distinct not only because there were six finalists instead of the usual five, but for the range of time periods, styles and geography the books represent.
"(The finalists) come from everywhere and these voices are strong and powerful and resonant," Rabinovitch said.
Atwood said she chose to celebrate her 80th birthday at the literary bash at Rabinovitch's behest.
"Elana made me do it," Atwood told reporters with a laugh.
As her global book tour for "The Testaments" winds down, Atwood said she's hoping to catch up on the latest Canadian reads.
"There's some interesting non-fiction books as well, and I would say quite a lot of fiction," Atwood said. "I haven't plowed my way through it, but I will."
Singer-songwriter and actress Jann Arden, who hosted the night's televised festivities, serenaded Atwood with a birthday tune.
"Happy birthday to you. You write such good books," Arden crooned. "Now Canada's famous for more than just maple syrup."
The six finalists were chosen from 117 submissions by a jury consisting of Canadian writers Donna Bailey Nurse, Randy Boyagoda and Jose Teodoro, Scottish-Sierra Leonean author Aminatta Forna and Bosnian-American author Aleksandar (Sasha) Hemon.
The Giller awards $100,000 annually to the author of the best Canadian novel or short story collection published in English, and $10,000 to each of the finalists.
Last year's winner was Esi Edugyan for "Washington Black."
"The title determined the structure. The title determined the story. The title was always there."
— Scotiabank Giller Prize (@GillerPrize)
Reproduction by Ian Williams is a finalist for the 2019 Scotiabank Giller Prize.
by Steve Blackburn for Tom Sandler Photography
This report by The Canadian Press was originally published Nov. 18, 2019.