Writers' Trust of Canada - 50 Years
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Wayne Johnston

Wayne Johnston was born and raised in Goulds, Newfoundland. His first novel, The Story of Bobby O’Malley, won the WH Smith/Books in Canada First Novel Award. Johnston went on to publish numerous critically praised works of fiction and nonfiction, including The Divine Ryans, which he adapted for film; Baltimore’s Mansion, winner of the Charles Taylor Prize for Literary Non-Fiction; The Colony of Unrequited Dreams; and The Navigator of New York, both international bestsellers. He has been a finalist for Writers’ Trust fiction and nonfiction book prizes, and in 2011 received the Writers’ Trust Engel Findley Award for a mid-career body of work. He lives in Toronto. 

Writers & Books

Award History

Jury Citation

“Wayne Johnston spins wonderful stories; he is a gather-you-round-and-I-will-enchant-you raconteur. He has absorbed the world around him — the tall tales, the history, the epic of a place — and adapted it to a narrative style that is clearly his own. His stories charm and beguile. He writes about the ordinary and extraordinary people of Newfoundland with great empathy and without a shred of sentimentality. At the same time his fiction has a mythic quality: Smallwood walking across the island through drifted snow; a father and son surviving a long trek through winter woods by holding onto a horse and one another; an iceberg with the likeness of the Virgin Mary. Wayne Johnston’s fiction is subtle, his passion understated, his humour underpinned by tragedy. All of his work, superbly written, is a powerful combination of insight, talent and revelation. It is made to endure.” — 2011 Writers’ Trust Engel/Findley Award Jury (David Bergen, Joan Clark Miriam Toews)

1999 - Finalist

Hilary Weston Writers’ Trust Prize for Nonfiction

for

Baltimore’s Mansion: A Memoir


1998 - Finalist

Atwood Gibson Writers’ Trust Fiction Prize

for

The Colony of Unrequited Dreams

Program History

Works Recognized by WT