Ian Williams is the author of eight acclaimed books of fiction, poetry, and nonfiction. His most recent novel is You’ve Changed, selected as a best book of the year by CBC and Globe and Mail and the Giller Prize longlist. He delivered the 2024 CBC Massey Lectures, What I Mean to Say, about rehabilitating conversations in fraught times.
His novel, Reproduction, won the Giller Prize and was published in Canada, the US, the UK, and Italy. Disorientation, a collection of essays, considers the impact of racial encounters on ordinary people. It was selected as a best book of the year by the Boston Globe and translated into Italian. His short story collection, Not Anyone’s Anything, won the Danuta Gleed Literary Award for the best first collection of short fiction in Canada.
Williams’s poetry collection, Word Problems, converts the ethical and political issues of our time into math and grammar problems. It won the Raymond Souster Award from the League of Canadian Poets. His previous collection, Personals, was shortlisted for the Griffin Poetry Prize and the Robert Kroetsch Poetry Book Award. His first book, You Know Who You Are, was a finalist for the ReLit Poetry Prize. He is a trustee for the Griffin Poetry Prize.
Williams completed his Ph.D. at the University of Toronto. After several years teaching poetry in the School of Creative Writing at the University of British Columbia, Williams returned to the University of Toronto as a tenured full professor of English, director of the Creative Writing program and academic advisor for the Massey College William Southam Journalism Fellowship. He was a former Canadian Writer-in-Residence for the University of Calgary’s Distinguished Writers Program and has held many other posts, including Miegunyah Distinguished Fellow at the University of Melbourne and Visiting Fellow at the American Library in Paris.