Pulitzer Prize for Fiction

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Template:Short descriptionScript error: No such module "Unsubst".Script error: No such module "Sidebar". The Pulitzer Prize for Fiction is one of the seven American Pulitzer Prizes that are annually awarded for Letters, Drama, and Music. It recognizes distinguished fiction by an American author, preferably dealing with American life, published during the preceding calendar year.Script error: No such module "Unsubst".

As the Pulitzer Prize for the Novel (awarded 1918–1947), it was one of the original Pulitzers; the program was inaugurated in 1917 with seven prizes, four of which were awarded that year[1] (no Novel prize was awarded in 1917, the first one having been granted in 1918).[2]

The name was changed to the Pulitzer Prize for Fiction in 1948[3] and eligibility was expanded to the broader "distinguished fiction published in book form".[4][5] The Advisory Board wanted to give the award to James A. Michener's Tales of the South Pacific, which required expanding the category criteria and lifting the ban on short stories.[6]

Finalists have been announced since 1980, usually a total of three.[2]

Definition

As defined in the original Plan of Award, the prize was given "Annually, for the American novel published during the year which shall best present the wholesome atmosphere of American life, and the highest standard of American manners and manhood," although there was some struggle over whether the word wholesome should be used instead of whole, the word Pulitzer had written in his will.[7] In 1927, the advisory board quietly instituted Pulitzer's word choice, replacing wholesome with whole.

A new consideration arose when the Pulitzer jury was unanimous in recommending Thornton Wilder's The Bridge of San Luis Rey for the 1928 prize, although the book deals with Peruvians in Peru, not with Americans in America. The jury chair, Richard Burton of Columbia University, emphasized the moral value of the book in his report to the advisory board: "This piece of fiction is not only an admirable example of literary skill in the art of fiction, but also possesses a philosophic import and a spiritual elevation which greatly increases its literary value." Robert Morss Lovett disagreed, saying it would be "mere subterfuge to say that it has anything to do with the highest standard of American manners and manhood," but went along with the jury in finding "less literary merit" in the other novels under discussion. (Lovett rejected the runner-up Black April by Julia Peterkin, calling it "a rather unedifying picture of life in a primitive negro community" and "an ironical answer to the terms on which the prize is offered." Peterkin won nevertheless in 1929 for a similar novel, Scarlet Sister Mary.) Having settled on Bridge, the Advisory Board redefined the conditions from "whole atmosphere of American life, and the highest standard of American manners and manhood" to "preferably one which shall best present the whole atmosphere of American life," although this did not address the novel's setting.[8] Further refinement into "the best novel published that year by an American author" removed any impediment to Pearl S. Buck's The Good Earth in 1932, also with a foreign setting in its study of Chinese village life in Anhui, East China.[9]

With 1929 came the first of several much more substantive changes. The board changed the wording to "preferably one which shall best present the whole atmosphere of American life" and deleted the insistence that the novel portray "the highest standard of American manners and manhood". In 1936, emphasis was changed again, with the award going to "a distinguished novel published during the year by an American author, preferably dealing with American life". In 1948, the advisory board widened the scope of the award with the wording "For distinguished fiction published in book form during the year by an American author, preferably dealing with American life."[7] This change allowed the prize to go to a collection of short stories for the first time, James Michener's Tales of the South Pacific.

Winners

In 31 years under the "Novel" name, the prize was awarded 27 times; in its first 76 years to 2024 under the "Fiction" name, 70 times. There have been 11 years during which no title received the award. It was shared by two authors for the first time in 2023.[2] Since this category's inception in 1918, 31 women have won the prize. Four authors have won two prizes each in the Fiction category: Booth Tarkington, William Faulkner, John Updike, and Colson Whitehead.

Because the award is for books published in the preceding calendar year, the "Year" column links to the preceding year in literature.

1910s to 1970s

Year Author Work Genre(s)
1917 Ernest Poole His FamilyTemplate:Efn Novel
1918 Booth Tarkington The Magnificent Ambersons Novel
1919 Not awardedTemplate:Efn
1920 Edith Wharton The Age of InnocenceTemplate:Efn[10] Novel
1921 Booth Tarkington Alice Adams Novel
1922 Willa Cather One of Ours Novel
1923 Margaret Wilson The Able McLaughlins Debut novel
1924 Edna Ferber So BigTemplate:Efn Novel
1925 Sinclair Lewis ArrowsmithTemplate:Efn Novel
1926 Louis Bromfield Early Autumn Novel
1927 Thornton Wilder The Bridge of San Luis ReyTemplate:Efn Novel
1928 Julia Peterkin Scarlet Sister MaryTemplate:Efn Novel
1929 Oliver La Farge Laughing BoyTemplate:Efn Novel
1930 Margaret Ayer Barnes Years of GraceTemplate:Efn Novel
1931 Pearl S. Buck The Good EarthTemplate:Efn Historical fiction
1932 T. S. Stribling The StoreTemplate:Efn Novel
1933 Caroline Miller Lamb in His BosomTemplate:Efn Debut novel
1934 Josephine Winslow Johnson Now in NovemberTemplate:Efn Debut novel
1935 Harold L. Davis Honey in the HornTemplate:Efn Debut novel
1936 Margaret Mitchell Gone with the WindTemplate:Efn Novel
1937 John Phillips Marquand The Late George ApleyTemplate:Efn Epistolary novel
1938 Marjorie Kinnan Rawlings The YearlingTemplate:Efn Young adult literature
1939 John Steinbeck
The Grapes of WrathTemplate:Efn Novel
1940 Not awardedTemplate:Efn
1941 Ellen Glasgow In This Our LifeTemplate:Efn Novel
1942 Upton Sinclair Dragon's TeethTemplate:Efn Novel
1943 Martin Flavin Journey in the DarkTemplate:Efn Novel
1944 John Hersey A Bell for AdanoTemplate:Efn War novel
1945 Not awardedTemplate:Efn
1946 Robert Penn Warren All the King's MenTemplate:Efn Political fiction
1947 James A. Michener Tales of the South PacificTemplate:Efn Interrelated short stories,
Book debut
1948 James Gould Cozzens Guard of HonorTemplate:Efn War novel
1949 A. B. Guthrie The Way WestTemplate:Efn Western fiction
1950 Conrad Richter The TownTemplate:Efn Novel
1951 Herman Wouk The Caine MutinyTemplate:Efn Historical fiction
1952 Ernest Hemingway The Old Man and the SeaTemplate:Efn Short novel
1953 Not awardedTemplate:Efn
1954 William Faulkner A FableTemplate:Efn Novel
1955 MacKinlay Kantor AndersonvilleTemplate:Efn Historical fiction
1956 Not awardedTemplate:Efn
1957 James Agee A Death in the FamilyTemplate:Efn
(posthumously)
Autobiographical novel
1958 Robert Lewis Taylor The Travels of Jaimie McPheetersTemplate:Efn Historical fiction
1959 Allen Drury Advise and ConsentTemplate:Efn Political fiction,
Debut novel
1960 Harper Lee To Kill a MockingbirdTemplate:Efn Southern Gothic,
Bildungsroman,
Debut novel
1961 Edwin O'Connor The Edge of SadnessTemplate:Efn Novel
1962 William Faulkner The ReiversTemplate:Efn
(posthumously)
Novel
1963 Not awardedTemplate:Efn
1964 Shirley Ann Grau The Keepers of the House Novel
1965 Katherine Anne Porter The Collected StoriesTemplate:Efn Short story collection
1966 Bernard Malamud The Fixer Novel
1967 William Styron The Confessions of Nat TurnerTemplate:Efn Historical fiction
1968 N. Scott Momaday House Made of DawnTemplate:Efn Novel
1969 Jean Stafford Collected StoriesTemplate:Efn Short story collection
1970 Not awardedTemplate:Efn
1971 Wallace Stegner Angle of ReposeTemplate:Efn Novel
1972 Eudora Welty The Optimist's Daughter Short novel
1973 Not awardedTemplate:Efn
1974 Michael Shaara The Killer Angels Historical fiction
1975 Saul Bellow Humboldt's GiftTemplate:Efn Novel
1976 Not awardedTemplate:Efn
1977 James Alan McPherson Elbow RoomTemplate:Efn Short story collection
1978 John Cheever The Stories of John CheeverTemplate:Efn Short story collection

1980s to present

Winners (listed first) and finalists.

Year Author Work Genre(s)
1980 Norman Mailer The Executioner's Song True crime novel
William Wharton Birdy
Philip Roth The Ghost Writer
1981 John Kennedy Toole A Confederacy of Dunces
(posthumously)
Picaresque novel
Frederick Buechner Godric
William Maxwell So Long, See You Tomorrow
1982 John Updike Rabbit Is Rich Novel
Robert Stone A Flag for Sunrise
Marilynne Robinson Housekeeping
1983 Alice Walker The Color Purple Epistolary novel
Anne Tyler Dinner at the Homesick Restaurant
Chaim Grade Rabbis and Wives
1984 William Kennedy Ironweed Novel
Raymond Carver Cathedral
Thomas Berger The Feud
1985 Alison Lurie Foreign Affairs Novel
Diana O'Hehir I Wish This War Were Over
Douglas Unger Leaving the Land
1986 Larry McMurtry Lonesome Dove Western novel
Russell Banks Continental Drift
Anne Tyler The Accidental Tourist
1987 Peter Taylor A Summons to Memphis Novel
Donald Barthelme Paradise
Norman Rush Whites
1988 Toni Morrison Beloved Novel
Diane Johnson Persian Nights
Alice McDermott That Night
1989 Anne Tyler Breathing Lessons Novel
Raymond Carver Where I'm Calling From
1990 Oscar Hijuelos The Mambo Kings Play Songs of Love Novel
E. L. Doctorow Billy Bathgate
1991 John Updike Rabbit At Rest Novel
Linda Hogan Mean Spirit
Tim O'Brien The Things They Carried
1992 Jane Smiley A Thousand Acres Domestic realism
David Gates Jernigan
Robert M. Pirsig Lila: An Inquiry into Morals
Don DeLillo Mao II
1993 Robert Olen Butler A Good Scent from a Strange Mountain Short story collection
Alice McDermott At Weddings and Wakes
Joyce Carol Oates Black Water
1994 E. Annie Proulx The Shipping News Novel
Philip Roth Operation Shylock: A Confession
Reynolds Price The Collected Stories
1995 Carol Shields The Stone Diaries Novel
Grace Paley The Collected Stories
Joyce Carol Oates What I Lived For
1996 Richard Ford Independence Day Novel
Oscar Hijuelos Mr. Ives' Christmas
Philip Roth Sabbath's Theater
1997 Steven Millhauser Martin Dressler: The Tale of an American Dreamer Novel
Joanna Scott The Manikin
Ursula K. Le Guin Unlocking the Air and Other Stories
1998 Philip Roth American Pastoral Novel
Robert Stone Bear and His Daughter: Stories
Don DeLillo Underworld
1999 Michael Cunningham The Hours historical fiction
Russell Banks Cloudsplitter
Barbara Kingsolver The Poisonwood Bible
2000 Jhumpa Lahiri Interpreter of Maladies Short story collection
Annie Proulx Close Range: Wyoming Stories
Ha Jin Waiting
2001 Michael Chabon The Amazing Adventures of Kavalier & Clay Historical fiction
Joyce Carol Oates Blonde
Joy Williams The Quick and the Dead
2002 Richard Russo Empire Falls Novel
Colson Whitehead John Henry Days
Jonathan Franzen The Corrections
2003 Jeffrey Eugenides Middlesex Family saga
Andrea Barrett Servants of the Map: Stories
Adam Haslett You Are Not a Stranger Here
2004 Edward P. Jones The Known World Historical fiction
Susan Choi American Woman
Marianne Wiggins Evidence of Things Unseen
2005 Marilynne Robinson Gilead Epistolary novel
Ward Just An Unfinished Season
Ha Jin War Trash
2006 Geraldine Brooks March Historical fiction
Lee Martin The Bright Forever
E. L. Doctorow The March
2007 Cormac McCarthy The Road Post-apocalyptic fiction
Alice McDermott After This
Richard Powers The Echo Maker
2008 Junot Díaz The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao Novel
Lore Segal Shakespeare's Kitchen
Denis Johnson Tree of Smoke
2009 Elizabeth Strout Olive Kitteridge[11] Short story collection
Christine Schutt All Souls
Louise Erdrich The Plague of Doves
2010 Paul Harding Tinkers[12] Novel
Daniyal Mueenuddin In Other Rooms, Other Wonders
Lydia Millet Love in Infant Monkeys
2011 Jennifer Egan A Visit from the Goon Squad[13] Short story collection
Jonathan Dee The Privileges
Chang-rae Lee The Surrendered
2012 Not awarded[14]
Karen Russell Swamplandia!
David Foster Wallace The Pale King (posthumously)
Denis Johnson Train Dreams
2013 Adam Johnson The Orphan Master's SonTemplate:Efn Novel
Eowyn Ivey The Snow Child
Nathan Englander What We Talk About When We Talk About Anne Frank
2014 Donna Tartt The GoldfinchTemplate:Efn Novel
Philipp Meyer The Son
Bob Shacochis The Woman Who Lost Her Soul
2015 Anthony Doerr All the Light We Cannot SeeTemplate:Efn War novel
Richard Ford Let Me Be Frank With You
Joyce Carol Oates Lovely, Dark, Deep
Laila Lalami The Moor's Account
2016 Viet Thanh Nguyen The SympathizerTemplate:Efn Novel
Kelly Link Get in Trouble: Stories
Margaret Verble Maud's Line
2017 Colson Whitehead The Underground RailroadTemplate:Efn Alternate historical fiction
Adam Haslett Imagine Me Gone
C. E. Morgan The Sport of Kings
2018 Andrew Sean Greer LessTemplate:Efn Satire
Hernan Diaz In the Distance
Elif Batuman The Idiot
2019 Richard Powers The OverstoryTemplate:Efn Novel
Rebecca Makkai The Great Believers
Tommy Orange There There
2020 Colson Whitehead The Nickel BoysTemplate:Efn Novel
Ann Patchett The Dutch House
Ben Lerner The Topeka School
2021 Louise Erdrich The Night WatchmanTemplate:Efn Novel
Daniel Mason A Registry of My Passage Upon the Earth
Percival Everett Telephone
2022 Joshua Cohen The Netanyahus: An Account of a Minor and Ultimately Even Negligible Episode in the History of a Very Famous FamilyTemplate:Efn Novel
Francisco Goldman Monkey Boy
Gayl Jones Palmares
2023[15] Hernan Diaz Trust[16] Novel
Barbara Kingsolver Demon Copperhead[17] Novel
Vauhini Vara The Immortal King Rao
2024 Jayne Anne Phillips Night WatchTemplate:Efn Novel
Yiyun Li Wednesday's Child
Ed Park Same Bed Different Dreams
2025 Percival Everett JamesTemplate:Efn Novel
Rita Bullwinkel Headshot
Gayl Jones The Unicorn Woman
Stacey Levine Mice 1961

Repeat winners

Four writers to date have won the Pulitzer Prize for Fiction multiple times, one nominally in the novel category and two in the general fiction category. Ernest Hemingway was selected by the 1941 and 1953 juries, but the former was overturned with no award given that year.Template:Efn

Authors with multiple nominations

4 nominations

3 nominations

2 nominations

Notes

Template:Notelist

References

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Further reading

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External links

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Template:PulitzerPrizes Template:PulitzerPrize Fiction