Janika Oza

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Janika Oza is a Canadian novelist. Her debut novel, A History of Burning, was shortlisted for the Governor General's Award for English-language fiction at the 2023 Governor General's Awards, the 2024 Carol Shields Prize for Fiction,[1] and the 2024 Amazon.ca First Novel Award.[2]

Her short story "Fish Stories" won the 2022 O. Henry Award.

In a piece for Toronto Star discussing her ancestry, Oza explained that her "great-grandparents left British-ruled India for British-ruled East Africa in the early 1900s, where three generations of my family settled, first in Kenya and then in Uganda, until they were exiled in 1972 under the dictator Idi Amin’s decree to expel all Asians from the country." She was the first person in her family to be born in Canada. She further explained that this ancestry helped her explore the questions raised in A History of Burning.[3]

Oza was a school settlement worker.[4]

In 2025 she served on the jury for the Dayne Ogilvie Prize for emerging LGBTQ writers.[5]

Awards and honours

Year Title Award Result Ref.
2019 Exile Malahat Review Open Season Award Won [6]
The Gift of Choice CBC Short Story Prize Longlisted [6][7]
2020 "Fish Stories" Kenyon Review Short Fiction Award Won [6]
2022 O. Henry Award Won [6]
2023 A History of Burning Governor General's Awards English Fiction Shortlisted [8][9]
2024 Carol Shields Prize for Fiction Shortlisted [1]
Dayton Literary Peace Prize Shortlisted [10]

Works

References

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