Ada Limón Among 2018 NBCC Winners
On Thursday night the National Book Critics Circle announced the recipients of 2018 awards in the categories of Autobiography, Biography, Criticism, Fiction, Poetry, and more. (We're particularly thrilled that The Carrying by Ada Limón won in the Poetry category.) At New York magazine, Bethy Squires notes that the "class of 2018 includes Milkman, a novel by Irish author Anna Burns that surprised most readers last year by winning the even more prestigious Man Booker Prize." Picking up from there:
Among the nonfiction winners were two works about contending with troubling historical legacies. Nora Krug’s Belonging, a graphic memoir about the “inherited sin” of the Holocaust, won in the category of autobiography, while the nonfiction prize went to Steve Coll’s Directorate S: The C.I.A. and America’s Secret Wars in Afghanistan. “Told with empathy for all sides, [Coll’s] account is sad, frightening, and moving in its depiction of the human toll of the conflict,” said Seattle Times critic and NBCC board member Mary Ann Gwinn. The biography prize went to New York magazine’s city editor, Christopher Bonanos, for his biography of the legendary New York crime photographer Weegee. “Bonanos has written a page-turner about, of all people, a grubby loner scrambling around Manhattan taking pictures of usually humble and often dirtyish goings-on,” said linguist John McWhorter, “usually after dark, and with a focus bordering on the compulsive.”
Tommy Orange’s critically acclaimed story cycle, There There, won the John Leonard Prize, which goes to an outstanding debut book of any kind. Orange has an MFA from the Institute of American Indian Arts. He is a 2014 MacDowell Fellow and a 2016 Writing by Writers Fellow. Novelist Zadie Smith took the criticism prize for her book of essays, Feel Free, while longtime NPR critic Maureen Corrigan earned the Nona Balakian Citation for Excellence in Reviewing.
Read all about the winners at New York.