Jane Eaton Hamilton


Jane Eaton Hamilton is a Canadian short story writer, novelist, essayist and poet, who goes by "Hamilton" and uses they/their pronouns.
Hamilton has published the novel Weekend, three books of poetry, Body Rain and Steam-Cleaning Love, Love Will Burst into a Thousand Shapes, a poetry chapbook and two volumes of short fiction July Nights and Other Stories, and Hunger,. They are also the author, under the pseudonymous name of Ellen Prescott, of the memoir Mondays are Yellow, Sundays are Grey retitled No More Hurt which was included on the Guardian's Best Book of the Year list and was a Sunday Times bestseller. Their books have been shortlisted for the BC Book Prizes, the ReLit Award, the VanCity Award, the Pat Lowther Award, the Ferro-Grumley Award, and the MIND Book Prize.
Their short work has appeared in such publications as En Route, The Sun, The New York Times, Maclean's, Geist, the Missouri Review, Gay Magazine, Salon,The Rumpus, The Globe and Mail and Seventeen. They have won many awards for short work, including, twice, first prize in the CBC Literary Awards, 2015's Lit Pop Prize, judged by George Saunders, twice first prize in the Prism International Short Story Award, Canadian Poetry Chapbook of the Year from the League of Canadian Poets, the event Non-Fiction Award, and many others. They have had Notable essays in BAE three times, 2016, 2018, and 2019, and a Notable short story in BASS. Work is upcoming in BAX 2020, ed Carmen Maria Machado and Joyelle McSweeney.
They were a litigant in the Canadian same-sex marriage case between 2000-2003. They spent several years as a photographer and for years volunteered for the organization Now I Lay Me Down to Sleep. Hamilton is also a visual artist. They have two grown daughters and four grandchildren. They are also a Master Gardener.

Notable awards

Skinning the Rabbit, Notable, Best American Essays, 2018
Wish You Were Here Best Canadian Poetry, 2016
Never Say I Didn't Bring You Flowers, Notable, Best American Essays, 2016
Battery, Lit Pop fiction, 2015, winner
Smiley, CBC Canada Writes, fiction, 2014
The Lost Boy, CBC Literary Awards, first prize, fiction, 2003
Territory Journey Prize anthology, 1999
Goombay Smash Prism Int'l Short Fiction Prize, first, 1998, Best Canadian Stories, 1999
Graduation Journey Prize anthology, 1998
How to Have Heart Disease notable, Best American Short Stories, 1997
Death in One Another's Arms story, cited, Pushcart Prize, 1989

Notable awards, Books

Weekend was longlisted for the ReLit Award
Going Santa Fe won the 1997 League of Canadian Poets Canadian Poetry Chapbook Award
July Nights was short-listed for the VanCity Award and the Ethel Wilson Fiction Award in the BC Book Prizes
Body Rain was short-listed for the Pat Lowther Award
No More Hurt was shortlisted for the VanCity Award and the MIND book award
Hunger, 2003 Publishing Triangle Awards, Ferro Grumley Prize, finalist, longlisted Lambda Literary Award, 2004