Moore's first two books,
Degrees of Nakedness (1995) and
Open (2002), are short story collections.
Open was a commercial and critical breakthrough, earning a nomination for the
Giller Prize.
Open was subsequently published as an unabridged audiobook. Her first novel,
Alligator (2005), was also nominated for the Giller Prize. It won the 2006
Commonwealth Writers' Prize Best Book Award,
Caribbean and
Canada Region, and was longlisted for the 2007
International Dublin Literary Award. Moore was one of 13 novelists on the long list for the 2010
Man Booker Prize for
February, a prize worth approximately $80,000. In an interview with
CBC Radio, Moore said she was "completely overwhelmed with happiness" when she heard the news while staying in a remote cabin with her husband. On February 15, 2013,
February won
Canada Reads 2013: Turf Wars. She released her newest short story collection,
Something for Everyone, in 2018. The book was named as a longlisted nominee for the 2018
Scotiabank Giller Prize. Her book ''Invisible Prisons: Jack Whalen's Tireless Fight for Justice'', cowritten with Whalen, was a finalist for the
Hilary Weston Writers' Trust Prize for Nonfiction. ==Bibliography==