Your cart is empty.
Suzette Mayr wins the 2022 Scotiabank Giller Prize!

Suzette Mayr wins the 2022 Scotiabank Giller Prize!

The Sleeping Car Porter wins the 2022 Giller Prize

By Coach House Date: November 10, 2022

On November 7th via live broadcast on CBC, Suzette Mayr was named the winner of the 2022 Scotiabank Giller Prize for her novel The Sleeping Car Porter! We are so thrilled to have published such a brilliant and important novel and cannot be happier for Suzette!

4

The Sleeping Car Porter brings to life an important part of Black history in North America, from the perspective of a queer man living in a culture that renders him invisible in two ways. Affecting, imaginative, and visceral enough that you’ll feel the rocking of the train, The Sleeping Car Porter is a stunning accomplishment.

Baxter’s name isn’t George. But it’s 1929, and Baxter is lucky enough, as a Black man, to have a job as a sleeping car porter on a train that crisscrosses the country. So when the passengers call him George, he has to just smile and nod and act invisible. What he really wants is to go to dentistry school, but he’ll have to save up a lot of nickel and dime tips to get there, so he puts up with “George.”

On this particular trip out west, the passengers are more unruly than usual, especially when the train is stalled for two extra days; their secrets start to leak out and blur with the sleep-deprivation hallucinations Baxter is having. When he finds a naughty postcard of two queer men, Baxter’s memories and longings are reawakened; keeping it puts his job in peril, but he can’t part with the postcard or his thoughts of Edwin Drew, Porter Instructor.

The jury wrote:
“Suzette Mayr brings to life –believably, achingly, thrillingly –a whole world contained in a passenger train moving across the Canadian vastness, nearly one hundred years ago. As only occurs in the finest historical novels, every page in The Sleeping Car Porter feels alive and immediate –and eerily contemporary. The sleeping car porter in this sleek, stylish novel is named R.T. Baxter –called George by the people upon whom he waits, as is every other Black porter. Baxter’s dream of one day going to school to learn dentistry coexists with his secret life as a gay man, and in Mayr’s triumphant novel we follow him not only from Montreal to Calgary, but into and out of the lives of an indelibly etched cast of supporting characters, and, finally, into a beautifully rendered radiance.”

Read more here: https://scotiabankgillerprize.ca/suzette-mayr-is-the-winner-of-the-2022-scotiabank-giller-prize/ 

Watch here: https://www.cbc.ca/books/watch-the-2022-scotiabank-giller-prize-replay-1.6642912