Kaie Kellough

Kaie Kellough (born 1975) is a Canadian poet and novelist.[1] He was born in Vancouver, British Columbia, raised in Calgary, Alberta, and in 1998 moved to Montreal, Quebec, where he lives.

Writing

Kellough has published three books of poetry, two audio recordings, one novel, and one collection of short stories. He is also a practitioner of vocal sound poetry. His work multiplies and layers voice, while exploring the fundamentals of language-production.

His experimental debut novel, Accordéon, takes the form of a transcript of someone being interrogated by three agents from a Ministry of Culture, and was a shortlisted nominee for the Amazon.ca First Novel Award.[2] The novel was inspired by the conflict over the proposed Quebec Charter of Values. Writing for the Montreal Review of Books, Sara Spike calls it "a remarkable work of experimental fiction that pushes back against those who would forward a singular narrative of this unabashedly contradictory city, celebrating instead the messy multiplicity of Montreal."[3]

Having mostly abandoned written poems in favor of sound work, Kellough only began to draw together the poems that would become Magnetic Equator after an encounter with Dionne Brand at a literary festival in 2017.[4]

Bibliography

Poetry

  • Lettricity (Cumulus Press 2005)
  • Maple Leaf Rag (Arbeiter Ring Publishing 2010, shortlisted for the Manuela Dias Design Award, Manitoba Book Awards)
  • Magnetic Equator (McClelland and Stewart 2019, shortlisted for the 2019 QWF A.M. Klein Award for Poetry, and winner of the 2020 Griffin Poetry Prize)

Audio

  • Vox:Versus (WOW 2011)
  • Creole Continuum (HOWL 2014)

Fiction

  • Accordéon (ARP Books 2016, shortlisted for the 2017 Amazon/Walrus Foundation First Novel Award)
  • Dominoes at the Crossroads (Véhicule Press 2020, longlisted for the 2020 Giller Prize)

Awards

Kellough's poetry collection Magnetic Equator (2019) was shortlisted for the QWF A.M. Klein Award for Poetry that same year, and won the 2020 Griffin Poetry Prize.[5] His short story collection Dominoes at the Crossroads was longlisted for the Giller Prize in 2020[6] and the ReLit Award for short fiction in 2021,[7] and won the Paragraphe Hugh MacLennan Prize for Fiction at the 2020 Quebec Writers' Federation Awards.[8] The book was a shortlisted finalist for the Danuta Gleed Literary Award in 2021.[9]

He is the first person to be nominated for the Griffin Poetry Prize and the Scotiabank Giller Prize in the same year.[4]

References

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