Lesbian author nominated for Toronto Book Award
IN PRINT / Farzana Doctor's Six Metres of Pavement a collision of Toronto identities
Rob Salerno / Toronto / Friday, August 31, 2012
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Six Metres of Pavement, by queer author Farzana Doctor, has been selected as one of five finalists for the Toronto Book Award, which celebrates authors and books that are evocative of Toronto. 
 
“I was really honoured,” Doctor says. “The book is inspired by the neighbourhood that I live in, Brockton Triangle, so to be nominated for a Toronto-based award made me thrilled.”
 
The book tells the story of three neighbours whose damaged lives intersect as they slowly come to care for each other despite their differences of background, class, race and sexual orientation. Ismail, a South Asian man, is consumed with guilt over his baby daughter’s death; Fatima is a young queer activist who’s been kicked out of her parents’ house; and Celia is a Portuguese-Canadian widow.
 
“One of the things that takes place in this book, and I think this is really true of Toronto, is that people of different communities really rub up against each other,” Doctor says.
 
The Toronto Book Award winner will be announced Oct 11 at the Bram and Bluma Appel Salon at the Toronto Reference Library. The finalists each receive $1,000, and the winner takes home another $10,000.
 
The nomination is just the latest honour for Six Metres of Pavement, which was awarded the Lambda Award for Lesbian Fiction in June. It’s Doctor’s second novel, after her 2007 book Stealing Nasreen.
 
Doctor says she’s been able to devote herself to her writing on a part-time basis since Stealing Nasreen’s success. She says she spends two or three days each week focusing on her writing and the balance of time on her career as a psychotherapist specializing on work with the queer community and people of colour.
 
She’s also been selected as writer-in-residence at North York Central Library, a position she’ll hold through the fall. She’ll spend her residency offering workshops for emerging and aspiring writers and reviewing manuscripts.
Farzana Doctor's second novel was inspired by her work as a psychotherapist specializing in the needs of queer people and people of colour, and by her Brockton Triangle neighbourhood.
(Vivek Shraya)
 
The other Toronto Book Award nominees are Copernicus Avenue, by Andrew Borkowski; Paramita, Little Black, by Suzanne Robertson; Writing Gordon Lightfoot: The Man, the Music, and the World in 1972, by Dave Bidini; and Writing the Revolution, by Michele Landsberg.
 
Six Metres of Pavement is published by Dundurn Press and is available as a paperback or e-book.
 
 
  


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Reader Comments


 
more puke
Social work in a smock. More class, race and gender bullshit. I would rather poke out my eyes than look at another piece of writing with this kind of boring, sickmaking, outdated and infantile theme.
sick of it, toronto ON
08/31/12 11:11 AM EST
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If you're sick of it...
... then don't read it.
JR, Toronto Ontario
08/31/12 12:53 PM EST
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Avoiding QuAIA supporters
Farzana Doctor has been a very public supporter of QuAIA. So, I would never read any of her books or refer anyone to her psychotherapy business.
Robert, Toronto ON
09/01/12 10:19 AM EST
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imperialist label as identity invasion
Does this person openly self-name as "lesbian" or is Xtra applying appropriation of self-saying? We wonder because most racialized world majority peoples do not try to fit the complexities or queerness of their socio-gendered psychosexualities into such trite and colonized, white-centric; indeed heteroimperialist naming.
La__dasha Sycamore Lu-uhn, QuD, Dnaisalie SK
09/01/12 10:39 PM EST
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