Current:Home > MyNational Book Awards: See all the winners, including Justin Torres, Ned Blackhawk -EverVision Finance
National Book Awards: See all the winners, including Justin Torres, Ned Blackhawk
View
Date:2025-04-20 00:30:16
NEW YORK — Justin Torres’ novel “Blackouts,” a daring and illustrated narrative that blends history and imagination in its recounting of a censored study of gay sexuality, has won the National Book Award for fiction.
On Wednesday night, the nonfiction prize was awarded to Ned Blackhawk’s “The Rediscovery of America: Native Peoples and the Unmaking of U.S. History” and young people’s literature was won by Dan Santat’s “A First Time for Everything.” Craig Santos Perez’s “from incorporated territory (åmot),” the fifth work in his series about his native Guam, was cited for best poetry, and Stênio Gardel’s “The Words That Remain,” translated from Portuguese by Bruna Dantas Lobato, won for literature in translation.
Torres, whose book imagines a conversation between a dying man and the young friend he educates about a real history called “Sex Variants,” gave a brief acceptance speech before he was joined by more than a dozen nominees who gathered to present a statement about the Israel-Hamas war. Read by fiction nominee Aaliyah Bilal, the statement condemned the “ongoing bombardment of Gaza,” antisemitism, anti-Palestinian sentiments and Islamophobia and called for a humanitarian cease-fire. The authors received a standing ovation after Bilal finished.
One sponsor, Zibby Media, had withdrawn support out of concerns the statement might be antisemitic and anti-Israel.
Oprah Winfrey gave an emotional keynote address during the dinner ceremony at Cipriani Wall Street, and honorary medals were presented to poet Rita Dove and to Paul Yamazaki, a longtime bookseller at San Francisco’s famed City Lights store.
Check out: USA TODAY's weekly Best-selling Booklist
Pinkfights 'hateful' book bans with pledge to give away 2,000 banned books at Florida shows
Winners in the five competitive categories each received $10,000.
The night’s unofficial themes were self-expression, voices silenced and raised and the way literature can, as Dove described it, summon the voice of our “unarticulated disturbances.”
The National Books Awards are a tribute to words and the right to read, as embodied this year by event host LeVar Burton and Winfrey. Burton, a longtime champion of reading, marveled that he and Winfrey, both descended from enslaved people, could become “symbols for literacy, literature and the written word.”
Winfrey, seated during dinner between book club choices Jesmyn Ward and Abraham Verghese, became tearful as she spoke of her lifelong passion for words and reverence for authors. She quoted from such favored works as Alice Walker’s “The Color Purple” and Barbara Kingsolver’s “Demon Copperhead” and condemned those who ban books, calling censorship an act of isolating people into “soulless echo chambers.”
Banned books:Why you should read these 51 books now
Books, Winfrey said, should be within reach “of everyone to choose for themselves.”
Hundreds attended the National Books Awards, raising more than $1 million for the National Book Foundation, which oversees the event and provides a wide range of public and educational programs. Booksellers and others judge panels of writers and select awards finalists and winners of the competitive categories, for which publishers submitted a total of more than 1,900 works.
The National Book Awards also are a literary celebration that often overlaps with current events, whether the election of former President Donald Trump, a prime topic at the 2016 ceremony, or the badges of support some wore last year for striking workers at HarperCollins Publishers.
Wednesday’s original host, Drew Barrymore, was dropped in September by the book foundation after she renewed the taping of her talk show while Hollywood writers were still on strike. Zibby Media and Book of the Month both declined to attend the ceremony, although only Zibby withheld its financial backing, according to the book foundation. The decision came before Zibby Media could be removed from the program guide, which listed the company as a “bronze” donor, between $25,000 and $49,000.
A full-page ad from Zibby appeared in the guide, opposite a full-page ad from Simon & Schuster for Bilal’s story collection “Temple Folk.”
Many of the winners spoke of using books to demonstrate and champion their own communities, whether the Native Americans in Blackhawk’s work of history or the Pacific Islanders of Perez’s poetry.
The fiction nominees were themselves a kind of collective statement, dramatizing those overlooked or oppressed, whether the brutalized prisoners of Nana Kwame’s Adjei-Brenyah’s “Chain Gang All-Stars: A Novel,” the Nation of Islam members in “Temple Folk” or the Maine island devastated by racist theories in Paul Harding’s “This Other Eden.”
Nominee Hanna Pylväinen, whose work “The End of Drum-Time: A Novel” focuses in part on the Indigenous Sami of 19th century Scandinavia, says one of the purposes of fiction is showing that “no matter what the community” we could “be any one of those people and that we can see how those people got to be where they were in their lives.”
Winfrey, in her speech, said books were a path to helping us relate to people we otherwise “have nothing in common with.” She then quoted the late Toni Morrison: “The function of freedom is to free someone else.”
veryGood! (22)
Related
- Warm inflation data keep S&P 500, Dow, Nasdaq under wraps before Fed meeting next week
- Jill Biden urges women to get mammograms or other cancer exams during Breast Cancer Awareness Month
- Blake Shelton Proves He Doesn't Wanna Love Nobody But Gwen Stefani in Sweet Birthday Tribute
- Denver Broncos to release veteran pass rusher Randy Gregory, per reports
- Selena Gomez engaged to Benny Blanco after 1 year together: 'Forever begins now'
- Looking for innovative climate solutions? Check out these 8 podcasts
- Why this fight is so personal for the UAW workers on strike
- Feds target international fentanyl supply chain with ties to China
- A White House order claims to end 'censorship.' What does that mean?
- Pope Francis could decide whether Catholic Church will bless same-sex unions
Ranking
- Are Instagram, Facebook and WhatsApp down? Meta says most issues resolved after outages
- Scott Disick Praises Real Life Princess Kylie Jenner's Paris Fashion Week Look
- Philippine boats breach a Chinese coast guard blockade in a faceoff near a disputed shoal
- Behind Taylor Swift, Chiefs-Jets is NFL's second-most watched game of 2023 regular season
- Federal appeals court upholds $14.25 million fine against Exxon for pollution in Texas
- Hungary’s foreign minister hints that Budapest will continue blocking EU military aid to Ukraine
- 160 arrested in Ohio crackdown on patrons of sex workers
- Firefighters work until dawn to remove wreckage of bus carrying tourists in Venice; 21 dead
Recommendation
Brianna LaPaglia Reveals The Meaning Behind Her "Chickenfry" Nickname
Taiwan indicts 2 communist party members accused of colluding with China to influence elections
Male nanny convicted in California of sexually assaulting 16 young boys in his care
A bus crash in a Venice suburb kills at least 21 people
Nevada attorney general revives 2020 fake electors case
Flights canceled and schools closed as Taiwan braces for Typhoon Koinu
Saudi Arabia says it will maintain production cuts that have helped drive oil prices up
The CFPB On Trial