Sarah Henstra wins Governor General’s fiction prize for book on campus politics
OTTAWA — Toronto author Sarah Henstra says she thinks her win at this year’s Governor General’s Literary Award for English-language fiction signals that Canadian readers are hungry for literature that tackles thorny cultural issues.
Henstra is among the winners announced Tuesday for her first foray into adult fiction, “The Red Word,” set at the epicentre of the polarized debate about sexual assault on university campuses.
The novel follows 19-year-old Karen Huls, a Canadian student at a prominent U.S. college in the 1990s, who is awakened to the ambiguities of gender politics after moving in with a group of radical feminist activists while dating a member of a fraternity notorious for drug-fuelled misogyny.
When she found out she had won the $25,0000 award, Henstra said she first had to make sure that someone wasn’t trying to pull a fast one on her.


