Introducing the Winners of 2025
Congratulations!
The Atlantic Book Awards was held on June 5, 2025 at Paul O’Regan Hall, Halifax Central Library, Halifax, NS.
APMA
Best Atlantic-Publisher Book
The winner of the 2025 APMA Best Atlantic-Published Book Award was Éditions Perce-Neige for the book Mal by Chase Cormier. The award celebrates the entire publishing process, from creation to market, with a $4,000 prize split between publisher and author/illustrator.
Ann Connor Brimer
Award for Atlantic Canadian Children’s Literature
The winner of the 2025 Ann Connor Brimer Award is New Brunswick author Valerie Sherrard for Standing on Neptune (DCB Young Readers). The jury praised the book for being beautifully written, engaging, and believable. “Sherrard has a gift for poetic expression, along with a deep insight into what it feels like to be young, vulnerable and very much alone,” said the jury.
Sherrard was a finalist for the Ann Connor Brimer Award in 2017 for her YA book Rain Shadow (Fitzhenry & Whiteside), in 2010 for Tumbleweed Skies (Fitzhenry & Whiteside), and in 2008 for Speechless (Dundurn Press). She previously won the award in 2011 for The Glory Wind (Fitzhenry & Whiteside).
Atlantic Legacy Award
Andrew Steeves & Gary Dunfield
Publishers Andrew Steeves and Gary Dunfield were presented with the 2025 Atlantic Legacy Award.
Since its founding in 1997, Gaspereau Press has quietly and modestly been forging its own way—creating books of great beauty, conviction, authenticity, and intelligence. Recognizing that staying small can be its own strength, publishers Andrew Steeves and Gary Dunfield kept everything inhouse—editing, design, printing, distribution. But equally important, they chose to be utterly “hands on”—to merge old printing technology with new, to emphasize the made-ness of each book. Using letterpress and offset technologies; sourcing fine papers, many handmade; and producing books of classic beauty and grace that garnered Steeves countless awards for design, they ignored publishing trends to be true to their own vision of their craft, and in doing so created one of the country’s most respected publishing houses: small, thoughtful, and committed to excellence rather than to market forces. Keeping things small and local has never meant being parochial—Gaspereau publications have received some of the country’s most prestigious awards, and delighted readers around the world.
Steeves and Dunfield’s unflagging commitment to their work has been a remarkable gift to the Atlantic literary community, in which they have nurtured and uplifted dozens of writers; to the Canadian publishing community, of which they have been valued, knowledgeable, and generous colleagues for nearly three decades; and to the community of Kentville and environs, where their annual Waygooze events have welcomed young and old to share in the joy of printing and book arts.
Gaspereau Press is now owned by Keagan Hawthorne and has been relocated to Sackville, NB. Check out its website.
Alistair MacLeod Award
Short Fiction Award
The winner of the 2025 Alistair MacLeod Award for Short Fiction is Susie Taylor for her collection of linked stories, Vigil (Breakwater Books).
Of the book, the jury said, “Taylor doesn’t shy away from difficult material, in the face of hardship her characters can be as messy and cruel, as they are resourceful and loyal. The portrayals of poverty and addiction in Vigil are raw and unflinchingly honest, and yet this collection is full of humour, tenderness, and vivid beauty.”
Susie Taylor lives in Harbour Grace, Newfoundland and Labrador. She is the author of two books, Vigil and Even Weirder Than Before. Taylor is the fiction editor at Riddle Fence Magazine.
Reader's Choice Award
Any Genre
After two rounds of voting and more than 1,000 votes, We’re Not Rich by Halifax writer Sue Murtagh published by Nimbus Publishing and Vagrant Press came out on top.
We’re Not Rich is a stunning collection of linked short stories exploring the promises and disappointments of modern life.
J. M. Abraham
Atlantic Poetry Award