The Journey Prize Anthologycelebrates its fifth anniversary with a selection, made with the assistance of Guy Vanderhaeghe, of eleven accomplished pieces of short fiction by some of the finest new voices in Canadian writing. The stories, with settings as varied as Alberta, Australia, Ireland, and El Salvador, tell of generational conflicts and resolutions, of how the past illuminates the present, and of how life must go on, even in the face of loss. Among the stories: The fates of a desperate young woman, a vain military man, and a weary Canadian news team collide dramatically amid the violence of a Central American civil war; in a story about the complications of middle age, the tensions between a visiting teenage son, his mother, and her new partner are broken when a moose inexplicably appears in their suburban swimming pool; a celebrated writer, learning that a friend and former lover is HIV-positive, confronts the limitations of his ability to love; in a strangely erotic tale, a misfit from a small North American town finds an unusual occupation in Japan; the funeral of a young man’s beloved grandfather climaxes with a procession of Voodoo gods; a man, seduced by his daughter’s roommate, has to overcome his guilt and shame to try to do what is best for his fatherless grandson; looking through old snapshots, an Australian woman gains insight into her unconventional mother's experiences as a wartime nurse. The winner of the $10,000 Journey Prize for 1993 was Gayla Reid, for “Sister Doyle’s Men.”