2026 Shields Prize Longlist

🔹

2026 Shields Prize Longlist 🔹

Canticle (Spiegel & Grau) by Janet Rich Edwards

“It’s an extraordinary honor to see Canticle named to the longlist for the Carol Shields Prize for Fiction. The novel celebrates medieval women striving for literacy, knowledge, and the right to tell their own stories. It’s especially meaningful that a tale about the beguines—a largely forgotten movement of women seeking spiritual and intellectual freedom—should be recognized in this way. It feels as if Canticle’s sisters have found her.”
— Janet Rich Edwards on being longlisted for the 2026 Shields Prize

Janet Rich Edwards is a graduate of GrubStreet’s Novel Incubator program. She is the author of Canticle, longlisted for the 2026 Carol Shields Prize for Fiction. She is a professor of epidemiology at Harvard University and works in the Division of Women’s Health at Brigham and Women’s Hospital. She lives in Brookline, Massachusetts.

Canticle

Set in thirteenth-century Bruges, this debut novel follows a spirited young woman’s explorations of faith, agency, and love among a community of fiercely independent women.

Aleys is sixteen years old and unusual: stubborn, bright, and prone to religious visions. She and her only friend, a young scholar, have been learning Latin together in secret—but just as she thinks their connection might become something more, everything unravels. When her father promises her in marriage to a merchant she doesn’t love, she runs away from home, finding shelter within a community of religious women who refuse to answer to the Church.

Among the hardworking and strong-willed beguines, Aleys glimpses for the first time the joys of belonging: a life of song, meaning, and friendship in the markets and along the canals of Bruges. But forces both mystical and political are afoot. Illegal translations of scripture, the women’s independence, and a sudden rash of miracles all draw the attention of an ambitious bishop—and bring Aleys and those around her into ever-increasing danger, a danger that will push Aleys to a new understanding of love and sacrifice.

Grounded in the little-told stories of medieval women—mystics, saints, anchoresses, and beguines—and introducing a major new talent, Canticle is a luminous work of historical fiction, vividly evoking a world on the verge of transformation.