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National Book Awards Handed To Susan Choi, Arthur Sze And More

Winners of this year's National Book Awards each receive $10,000 along with their prize.
Priscila Zambotto
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Winners of this year's National Book Awards each receive $10,000 along with their prize.

Updated at 10:04 p.m. ET

More than 1,700 books began the autumn with a chance at winning a National Book Award. Now, after a swanky ceremony Wednesday night in Manhattan, the folks behind just five of those books have each emerged with a trophy, a purse of $10,000 and the right to slap that precious gold medallion on the front cover of their work.

The winners of the 70th annual National Book Awards are:

  • Fiction: Susan Choi's Trust Exercise
  • Nonfiction: Sarah M. Broom's The Yellow House
  • Poetry: Arthur Sze's Sight Lines
  • Translated literature: Baron Wenckheim's Homecoming, by László Krasznahorkai and translator Ottilie Mulzet
  • Young people's literature: Martin W. Sandler's 1919: The Year That Changed America
  • As Broom reminded the attendees in her moving acceptance speech, the night was not just about the writers themselves, though. It was also about the people who supported them — like Broom's mother.

    "As a child, I watched her every move, seeing her eyes fall upon every word everywhere — encountered in the grocery store, on a bus, pamphlets, the package labels, my high school textbooks," Broom said, voice quavering.

    "She was always wolfing down words, insatiable — which is how I learned the ways in which words were a kind of sustenance, could be a beautiful relief or a greatest assault."

    Wednesday night's winners were also joined — in a more tangible way —by a couple of honorees whose names were released earlier by the National Book Foundation.

    Oren J. Teicher, chief executive at the , won this year's Literarian Award — a prize handed out for service to the wider literary community. And Edmund White won the medal for Distinguished Contribution to American Letters, the National Book Awards' version of a lifetime achievement award.

    The 79-year-old White, a trailblazing gay writer, has enjoyed a vast and varied life on the page, tackling biography, fiction, memoir and plenty that trod the unstable boundaries in between. It's partly that versatility that attracted the National Book Foundation to his work, according to a statement from David Steinberger, the chairman of the foundation's board of directors.

    Director John Waters, who has enjoyed an attention-grabbing career in his own right, explained it a bit differently on stage before handing White his award.

    "Edmund White helped start the in 1982. He's an AIDS activist, an AIDS survivor and he still loves sex," Waters said. "He's written so many top-notch memoirs that My Struggle seems stingy in the details department. He's pissed off Susan Sontag and Gore Vidal, and the world is a better place for it."

    White himself explained that the path he forged was rarely easy.

    "When I started submitting novels in the pre-Stonewall 1960s, my gay subject matter was offensive — especially since I didn't didn't write about hustlers or criminals or drag queens, but rather about the middle-class guy sharing an office with you. The familiar is more threatening than the exotic," he recalled. "Years later, various editors would tell me that they'd been moved by my submissions but hadn't dared accept them lest their colleagues think they themselves were gay."

    "To go from being the most maligned to a highly lauded writer in a mere half-century is a stunning is astonishing indeed," he added.

    Of course, it would not be a National Book Awards ceremony without a rousing defense of literature's place in society and its possibilities. For that, let's turn to LeVar Burton, former host of Reading Rainbow and the evening's emcee.

    "My mother graduated from college at the age of 17, the first person in her family to go to college. For me to be a well-known literary advocate in this nation, a place where only a scant few generations ago it would have been illegal for me to read — it's no small thing," Burton said in his opening monologue.

    Because, as he added, "it is the stories that we tell each other that define who we are, why we're here, what our mission is in life. It is storytelling that holds our civilization together."


    The Finalists

    Fiction

  • Susan ChoiTrust Exercise
  • Kali Fajardo-Anstine, Sabrina & Corina: Stories
  • Marlon JamesBlack Leopard, Red Wolf
  • Laila LalamiThe Other Americans
  • Julia PhillipsDisappearing Earth
  • Nonfiction

  • Sarah M. BroomThe Yellow House
  • Tressie McMillan CottomThick: And Other Essays
  • Carolyn ForchéWhat You Have Heard is True: A Memoir of Witness and Resistance
  • David TreuerThe Heartbeat of Wounded Knee: Native America from 1890 to the Present
  • Albert Woodfox with Leslie GeorgeSolitary
  • Poetry

  • Jericho Brown, The Tradition
  • Toi Derricotte, "I": New and Selected Poems
  • Ilya Kaminsky, Deaf Republic
  • Carmen Giménez Smith, Be Recorder
  • Arthur Sze, Sight Lines
  • Translated literature

  • Khaled Khalifa, Death Is Hard Work 
    Translated from Arabic by Leri Price
  • László Krasznahorkai, Baron Wenckheim's Homecoming 
    Translated from Hungarian by Ottilie Mulzet
  • Scholastique Mukasonga, The Barefoot Woman 
    Translated from French by Jordan Stump
  • Yoko Ogawa, The Memory Police 
    Translated from Japanese by Stephen Snyder
  • Pajtim Statovci, Crossing
    Translated from Finnish by David Hackston
  • Young people's literature

  • Akwaeke Emezi, Pet
  • Jason Reynolds, Look Both Ways: A Tale Told in Ten Blocks
  • Randy Ribay, Patron Saints of Nothing
  • Laura RubyThirteen Doorways, Wolves Behind Them All
  • Martin W. Sandler, 1919: The Year That Changed America
  • Copyright 2021 NPR. To see more, visit https://www.npr.org.

    Colin Dwyer covers breaking news for NPR. He reports on a wide array of subjects — from politics in Latin America and the Middle East, to the latest developments in sports and scientific research.
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