Utopia by Vincent Anioke
CBC Books | Posted: April 5, 2023 1:30 PM | Last Updated: April 5, 2023
2023 CBC Short Story Prize longlist
Vincent Anioke has made the 2023 CBC Short Story Prize longlist for Utopia.
The winner of the 2023 CBC Short Story Prize will receive $6,000 from the Canada Council for the Arts, have their work published on CBC Books and win a two-week writing residency at Artscape Gibraltar Point. Four finalists will each receive $1,000 from the Canada Council for the Arts and have their work published on CBC Books.
The shortlist will be announced on April 12 and the winner will be announced on April 18.
If you're interested in the CBC Literary Prizes, the 2023 CBC Poetry Prize is open for submissions until May 31.
About Vincent Anioke
Vincent Anioke is a software engineer at Google. He was born and raised in Nigeria but now lives in Canada. His short stories have appeared in SmokeLong Quarterly, Masters Review, Split Lip Magazine, Passages North and The Rumpus. He is the 2021 Austin Clarke Fiction Prize Winner and was also shortlisted for the 2021 Commonwealth Short Story Prize. A previous version of Utopia was also longlisted for the 2021 CBC Short Story Prize.
Entry in five-ish words
"New worlds, young love, pride."
The story's source of inspiration
"I immigrated to Canada from Nigeria in 2018. One evening, I found myself mulling over what it meant to uproot myself from familiar places, the parts of selves I left behind. As immigrants, we are constantly rewriting facets of our identities; some pull us back to the spaces of a past that we may never fully recover; other facets push us toward assimilating into our new world. The father and daughter in my story materialized that evening as blurry images representing these two sides. Their developing story arcs intersected with another deeper theme I've grappled with all my life: what we accept or reject from the ones we say we love."
First lines
On the last Saturday of October, Papa's guests gathered in the living room, misaligned couches sagging under their weight. They wore gold-threaded dashikis, even Papa, and washed their hands in a calabash of cold water.
"Thank you, nwa mu," said Chijioke with a brown-toothed smile. He and Papa had attended the same boarding secondary school in Lagos, strangers then. One ocean and 30 years later, they were comrades, bound by an unspoken necessity, conducting themselves as if their unity was inevitable, their friendship lifelong.
About the 2023 CBC Short Story Prize
The winner of the 2023 CBC Short Story Prize will receive $6,000 from the Canada Council for the Arts, have their work published on CBC Books and attend a two-week writing residency at Artscape Gibraltar Point. Four finalists will each receive $1,000 from the Canada Council for the Arts and have their work published on CBC Books.
The 2023 CBC Poetry Prize is currently open until May 31, 2023 at 11:59 p.m. ET. The 2024 CBC Short Story Prize will open in September and the 2024 CBC Nonfiction Prize will open in January 2024.