Kananaskis by Kathleen McCracken

The Canadian writer is on the 2024 CBC Poetry Prize longlist

Image | Kathleen McCracken

Caption: Kathleen McCracken is a Canadian poet living in Belfast, Northern Ireland. (Mariusz Śmiejek)

Kathleen McCracken has made the 2024 CBC Poetry Prize longlist for Kananaskis.
The winner of the 2024 CBC Poetry Prize will receive $6,000 from the Canada Council for the Arts(external link), a two-week writing residency at Banff Centre for Arts and Creativity(external link) and have their work published on CBC Books(external link). The four remaining finalists will each receive $1,000 from the Canada Council for the Arts(external link) and have their work published on CBC Books(external link).
The shortlist will be announced on Nov. 14 and the winner will be announced on Nov. 21.
If you're interested in the CBC Literary Prizes(external link), the 2025 CBC Nonfiction Prize opens in January and the 2025 CBC Poetry Prize will open in April.

About Kathleen McCracken

Kathleen McCracken is the author of eight collections of poetry including Blue Light, Bay and College, shortlisted for the Governor General's Award for Poetry, and a bilingual English/Portuguese edition entitled Double Self Portrait with Mirror: New and Selected Poems. She was a finalist for the WB Yeats Society of New York Poetry Competition, the Montreal International Prize for Poetry, the Walrus Poetry Prize and the Grist ProForma Poetry Prize. In 2019 she won the Seamus Heaney Award for New Writing. From 1992-2022 Kathleen was Lecturer in Creative Writing and Contemporary Literature at Ulster University, Northern Ireland.
McCracken longlisted for the 2020 CBC Poetry Prize for her entry Tucson Boots.

Entry in five-ish words

"The maps inside the maps."

The poem's source of inspiration

"Kananaskis was occasioned by a drive on Alberta 40 from Canmore to Longview, through what is known as Kananaskis Country. The highway is flanked by pine forests and winds around mountains and over rivers — it's exquisite territory and we stopped more than once to, as I put it in the poem, 'let the sun/slide in.' That the Kananaskis River is named after a Cree pathfinder who in 1858 assisted John Palliser's 1858 British North American Exploring Expedition led me to wanting to say something about how place names like those attached to mountains in Kananaskis Country are too often not the names originally given by the First Nations peoples who live in and know the land intimately. Those in my view rightful place names, and the stories embedded in them, have across Canada too often been overwritten by the names and narratives of Anglo-European settlers."

First lines

Kananaskis
Driving Alberta 40 – the Bighorn Highway
you pull off at Highwood Pass
to see the sun come up
behind the Misty Range.

Image | CBC Poetry Prize

Caption: The 2024 CBC Poetry Prize shortlist will be announced on Nov. 14 and the winner will be announced on Nov. 21. (Ben Shannon/CBC)

Check out the rest of the longlist

The longlist was selected from more than 2,700 submissions. A team of 12 writers and editors from across Canada compiled the list.
The jury selects the shortlist and the eventual winner from the readers' longlisted selections. This year's jury is composed of Shani Mootoo, Garry Gottfriedson and Emily Austin.
The complete longlist is: