One person's junk is sometimes literally that person's treasure.Australian author Helen Garner
was browsing through her junk email when she discovered an email from a
stranger advertising "good news." The email, which came from Yale
University, asked Garner to provide a phone number. Garner immediately
assumed it was a scam, before later realizing it was the quite the
opposite — the prestigious Windham-Campbell literary prize, worth
$150,000.
Garner only discovered her error after reaching out to her editor and contacting Yale.
"I nearly keeled over,” Garner told The Sydney Morning-Herald. “I’m staggered. I feel thrilled and validated."
She wasn't the only author to
have this problem. Unlike other literary prizes, the Windham-Campbell
doesn't have a submission process, and all nominees are judged
anonymously. The Guardian said many writers are therefore shocked when they do win, and some react with total disbelief.
Garner, joining eight other writers, was recognized for her nonfiction work. Her 2014 book House of Grief follows a man who deliberately drowned his three sons. Her newest collection of essays comes out in March 2016.
Everyone should check their junk folders now.
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