Ukrainian-born writer Maria Reva has won the 2026 Gordon Burn Prize for her debut novel Endling, announced on March 5 in Newcastle upon Tyne. The award recognizes bold and experimental works that push literary boundaries. Reva's victory highlights the growing influence of Ukrainian diaspora voices in contemporary literature.
The Gordon Burn Prize, established in 2012 by New Writing North, Faber & Faber, and the Gordon Burn Trust, honors exceptional writing with unconventional perspectives, styles, or subjects that often defy categorization and address broader societal issues. This year's £10,000 prize, which also offers up to three months at Gordon Burn's cottage in Berwickshire, Scotland, was presented at Northern Stage in Newcastle. The shortlist included Omar El Akkad, Sarah Hall, Elizabeth Lovatt, Anthony Shapland, and Morgan Talty, making the judging process challenging, according to chair judge Val McDermid.
McDermid, an international bestselling author, described Endling as “original,” “insightful,” “brave,” “fearless,” and “tender.” The novel, published by Virago, is set in Ukraine in 2022 amid war. It follows Yera, a maverick scientist breeding rare snails while navigating romance tours; and sisters Nastia and Solomiya, who pose as a bride and translator to search for their missing activist mother. Their stories intersect with a truck of kidnapped bachelors and Lefty, a unique snail. Reva noted, “Endling doesn’t have a traditional ending, because it’s about a war that hasn’t ended,” adding a personal touch: her grandfather remains in besieged Kherson, Ukraine, where recent artillery strikes damaged his home.
Born in Ukraine and raised in Vancouver, British Columbia, Reva holds an MFA from the University of Texas at Austin's Michener Center for Writers. Her previous short-story collection, Good Citizens Need Not Fear, won the Kobzar Award and was nominated for the Writers’ Trust of Canada Fiction Prize in 2020. Her writing has appeared in The Atlantic, Granta, and The Best American Short Stories. In November 2022, Russia sanctioned her, barring entry. Endling also made the 2026 Dublin Literary Award longlist.
Reva joined the announcement via FaceTime from Canada, calling the win “a really huge honour” and thanking Virago Press and editor Sarah Savitt. She reflected, “Endling is about many things, but at its core, it reckons with the place of fiction in today’s world.” McDermid praised the judging experience, saying the winner is one “Gordon himself would have enjoyed.” The event underscores Newcastle's role in literary celebrations, aligning with initiatives like New Writing North’s Right to Read program amid regional literacy challenges.