Convicted Canadian bank robber wins literary prize

Canadian author Stephen Reid.

The publisher of the book that won the City of Victoria Butler Book Prize in Vancouver this week says its author has a keen ability to capture the pangs of a life of addiction and crime, and the consequences that follow. And he should — Stephen Reid was a notorious bank robber who has spent more than two decades in prison.

The Canadian Press reported Reid was awarded the literary prize for A Crowbar in the Buddhist Garden:Writing from Prison, a book of essays that he wrote from the William Head Institution in Vancouver.

Reid was once a member of the Stopwatch Gang, a group of burglars who stole millions from about 100 banks in North America. The gang's leader, Patrick "Paddy" Mitchell, died in a prison hospital in 2007. In 1999, Reid was convicted of robbery, attempted murder and unlawful confinement for a bank robbery in Victoria and sentenced to 18 years in prison.

[ More Buzz: Substitute teacher high on heroin passes out in class ]

But a second, more literary life brought Reid into the spotlight this week for his book about prison life. The Globe and Mail called A Crowbar in the Buddhist Garden "a gripping read and an intellectual exploration of our flawed penal system."

It isn't his first writing endeavour; Reid also wrote the novel Jackrabbit Parole, published in 1987, from the Kingston Penitentiary, one of many institutions where he's done time, including Alcatraz.

The convict-author joins others who have documented and sold their crimes, including O.J. Simpson, the author of a hypothetical book entitled If I Did It.

Want the latest buzz before it goes viral?
Follow @YDailyBuzz on Twitter!