Awards & Winners

Adele Wiseman

Date of Birth 21-May-1928
Place of Birth Winnipeg
(Canada, Manitoba, Winnipeg Capital Region, Area code 204, Area code 431, Area codes 204 and 431)
Nationality Canada
Profession Novelist
Adele Wiseman was a Canadian author. Born in Winnipeg, Manitoba, she received a B.A. from the University of Manitoba in 1949. Her parents were Russian-Jews who emigrated from the Ukraine to Canada, in part, to escape the pogroms that accompanied the Russian Civil War. In 1956, Wiseman published her first novel, The Sacrifice, which won the Governor General's Award, Canada's most prestigious literary prize. Her only other novel, Crackpot, was published in 1974. Both novels deal with Jewish immigrant heritage, the struggle to survive the Depression and World War II, and the challenges the next generation faced in acculturating to Canadian society. Wiseman also published plays, children's stories, essays, and other non-fiction. Her book, Old Woman at Play, examines and meditates on the creative process while paying tribute to Wiseman's mother and the dolls she made. Wiseman was lifelong friends with Margaret Laurence, another Canadian author from Manitoba. Her nephew, Jacques Distler, is a theoretical physicist. She was an active and accessible Writer-in-Residence at the University of Windsor in her final years. At a campus rally against the First Gulf War, she read passionately a new poem denouncing war.

Awards by Adele Wiseman

Check all the awards nominated and won by Adele Wiseman.

1956


Governor General's Award for English-language fiction
Honored for : The sacrifice

Nominations 1956 »

Award Nominated Nominated Work
Governor General's Award for English-language fiction The sacrifice