Natalie Lim from Vancouver wins the 2018 CBC Poetry Prize for Arrhythmia

Image | CBC Poetry Prize - Natalie Lim

Caption: Natalie Lim is a Vancouver-based poet and musician. (Amanda Lim)

Natalie Lim from Vancouver, B.C. has won the 2018 CBC Poetry Prize for Arrhythmia, a poem about language, family and losing a part of yourself.
As the grand prize winner, Lim will receive $6,000 from the Canada Council for the Arts(external link) and a writing residency at the Banff Centre for Arts and Creativity(external link). Her poem was published on CBC Books(external link).
"As a third-generation Chinese Canadian, I often feel alienated from the 'Chinese' part of my identity. I was born and raised in Canada, just like my parents. I barely speak Chinese, and I know almost nothing about Chinese culture." Lim told CBC Books(external link) in an email. "I wrote Arrhythmia as a way of working through what it means to lose a part of yourself — or to never have known that part in the first place."
"Arrhythmia is a haunting lyric tribute to the love that endures across borders, time and loss of language," the jury, which was composed of Jordan Abel, Kai Cheng Thom and Ruth B., said in a statement. "With deft precision and arresting emotional depth, Arrhythmia is both grand and intimate in scope, evoking at once the stories of Chinese labourers on the Canadian Pacific Railway and the complex relationship between a grandmother and granddaughter who do not speak the same tongue.

Media Audio | CBC Books : Natalie Lim reads Arrhythmia

Caption: The 2018 CBC Poetry Prize was awarded to Natalie Lim for her poem inspired by the lives of her grandparents.

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"Lovely, mournful, and hopeful all at once, Arrhythmia is a poem that does honour to all the ancestors who dreamed that their children might find a better life in the land the elders once called Golden Mountain."
Lim's entry was chosen from more than 2,500 English-language submissions.
The jury selected the finalists and the winner from a longlist of 31 poems. The longlist was selected by a team of readers made up of writers and editors across Canada.
The other finalists for the 2018 CBC Poetry Prize were Sanita Fejzić for (M)other, Neil Griffin for Canadian Immigration Services Citizenship Exam, Julie Mannell for Phone Sex with a One Time Lover on the West Coast and Bola Opaleke for The Autobiography of Water. The finalists each received $1,000 from the Canada Council for the Arts(external link) and had their poems published on CBC Books(external link).
Mario Brassard(external link) is the winner of the French-language grand prize, Prix de poésie Radio-Canada(external link), for his poem Séconal(external link).
The CBC Literary Prizes(external link) have been recognizing Canadian writers since 1979. Past winners include Michael Ondaatje, Carol Shields, Michael Winter and Frances Itani.​
If you're interested in the CBC Literary Prizes(external link), the CBC Nonfiction Prize will be open for submissions on Jan. 1, 2019.
If you're a writer, you can join our Canada Writes Facebook group(external link), a place where Canadian writers can connect and support each other.

Listen to Natalie read Arrhythmia:

Media Audio | CBC Books : Natalie Lim reads Arrhythmia

Caption: The 2018 CBC Poetry Prize was awarded to Natalie Lim for her poem inspired by the lives of her grandparents.

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Watch Natalie be interviewed on CBC News:

Media Video | CBC News Vancouver at 6 : 2018 CBC Poetry Prize winner Natalie Lim on CBC Vancouver News

Caption: Natalie Lim, winner of the 2018 CBC Poetry Prize joins CBC Vancouver News host Dan Burritt to read some of her award winning poem Arrhythmia and to talk about its significance to her.

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