6 lessons David Bergen has learned from 25 years writing fiction
CBC Books | | Posted: November 9, 2018 2:31 PM | Last Updated: September 12, 2023
Winnipeg writer's novel Away from the Dead is on the Scotiabank Giller Prize longlist
David Bergen is on the longlist for the 2023 Scotiabank Giller Prize for his novel Away From The Dead. The $100,000 award annually recognizes the best in Canadian fiction. The shortlist will be revealed on Oct. 11.
Away from the Dead follows the chaotic lives of three young people in early 20th-century Ukraine amidst revolts and war. Lehn is a bookseller south of Kiev, Sablin is a stableboy who stays with anarchists and Inna is a young peasant. Connected to the violence and politics of the time, Lehn, Sablin and Inna's narratives weave together a complex story of humanity and hope.
Bergen is a Winnipeg-based fiction writer. He is the author of eight novels and two short story collections, including his previously Giller-nominated book Here the Dark in 2020 and The Age of Hope, which was defended by Ron MacLean on Canada Reads in 2013. Bergen received the Writer's Trust Matt Cohen Award: In Celebration of a Writing Life in 2018.
Bergen won the 1999 CBC Short Story Prize.
In 2018, Bergen received the Writers' Trust Matt Cohen Award, a $25,000 award that recognizes a writer for their dedication to pursuing writing as their sole profession. When accepting the award, Bergen outlined the lessons he has learned from spending 25 years working as a writer.
Here's an excerpt from his speech.
1. Find a good first reader who won't put up with any bullshit. I found that in [my wife] Mary, with whom I have lived for 40 years.
2. Don't take anything for granted.
3. Always be thankful for that moment when a story lands and the back of your head tingles and you know that you have caught something and you pray that it will flourish.
4. Know that this might never happen again.
5. You're never as good, or as bad, as people say you are.
6. Writing is play, and play is the path to the inner world.
Following his win Bergen spoke with the host of CBC Winnipeg's Marcy Markusa about the award and his decorated literary career.