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Nominated, Journey Prize, 2018: "Yellow Watch"
Long-listed, The Fiddlehead's Fiction Contest, 2017: "Yellow Watch"
Runner-up, UofT Magazine Writing Contest, 2015: "A Pilgrimage to Atalaia"
First Prize Winner, Toronto Star Short Story Contest, 2015: "A Dragonfly Dashed by My Face"
First Prize Winner, The Malahat Review Open Season Short-Fiction Writing Contest, 2013: "The Butterfly First"
This gripping collection takes us into the lives of Portuguese immigrants as they arrive in Toronto. Beginning in tiny Amendoeiro across the Tagus from Lisbon, it describes lives of abject poverty under the fascist thumb of Antonio Salazar. The men are often out of work from the local cork factory, and the women collect scraps to eat, while the dreaded secret police remain ever watchful for hints of unrest. Men disappear. It is a life of abuse, cruelty, and superstition, observed by the girl Milita, who calmly takes her beatings from her mother but misses nothing. These Portuguese stories are easily reminiscent of early Saramago.
Carmelinda Scian emigrated to Canada from Portugal as a teenager in the late 1960s with her parents. After marriage and two children, she obtained a BA and an English MA from the University of Toronto on a part time basis while operating a hair salon. Her works have appeared in several literary magazines across Canada, the USA, and Britain and have won several prizes, including the Malahat Review's Open Season Short Fiction Writing Contest, and the Toronto Star Short Story Contest. The story "Yellow Watch" was nominated for Canada's Journey Prize, and the story "River Crossing" has been selected for the 2022 edition of Best Canadian Stories. She lives in Toronto.
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