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Joan Didion wins National Book Award
Hillel Italie
NEW
YORK— On a night when honorary winner Norman Mailer likened the literary
novel to the horse and buggy, National Book Award judges helped canonize
what is sure to become a classic of nonfiction: Joan Didion’s “The Year
of Magical Thinking.”
Didion’s memoir about the death of her husband, author John Gregory
Dunne, brought the 70-year-old writer her first National Book Award in
her 40-year career and continued a wave of virtually non-stop praise
since the book came out a month ago. “There’s hardly anything I can say
about this except thank you,” Didion said Wednesday night, praising her
publisher, Alfred A. Knopf, for supporting her as she wrote her
painfully personal best seller. Didion has long been idolized by writers
for her precise, incisive fiction and literary journalism. But “The Year
of Magical Thinking” brought her a large readership, too, with
booksellers saying that her memoir has been especially in demand from
those who lost a loved one or knew someone who had.
Few were surprised by Didion’s victory. Few were not surprised by the
announcement for fiction: William T. Vollmann, cited for “Europe
Central,” an 800-page novel, complete with footnotes, about Germany and
the Soviet Union during World War II. E.L. Doctorow’s “The March” and
Mary Gaitskill’s “Veronica” had been regarded as the leading contenders.
“I thought I would lose, so I didn’t prepare a speech,” said Vollmann,
46, who then turned serious as he said his book was inspired by a film
he saw in elementary school “about burned corpses being pulled out of
ovens.”
Vollmann noted he was part German and wondered what he would have done
had he lived under the Nazis. “I’m very happy it’s over,” he said of his
book, “and that I don’t have to think about it anymore.”
A couple of hours before Vollman’s victory, the 82-year-old Mailer —
slowed by heart surgery and bad knees — was helped to the stage and in a
strong voice declared that technology was outwitting the literary
novelist and that serious writers were like carriage makers “before the
onrush of the automobile.”
Vollmann, whose Web site refers to him, perhaps in jest, as a “future
winner of the Nobel Prize for literature,” is a bit of a machine
himself. He is a prolific writer with a history of going long, his many
books including a seven-volume, 3,000-page work on violence.
But he didn’t disagree with Mailer’s point, saying after the ceremony
that “the book is probably going to become an irrelevant object,” and
adding, “I’m just going to stick it out as long as I can.” “It makes me
happy to try to do something beautiful. The world doesn’t owe me a
living,” he said.
It was a night for first-time winners, though some waited far longer
than others. W.S. Merwin, 78 years old and a published poet since the
1950s, finally won in poetry for “Migration.” The winner of the young
people’s literature award, Jeanne Birdsall, pulled it off with her debut
book. Her novel, “The Penderwicks,” tells of four sisters and their
widowed father.
Birdsall, 54, quoted from a letter from a young fan named Scott: “This
book is about being a good listener, even if you’re a grown-up.” She had
tried writing a novel for adults in her early 40s, said it nearly ruined
her marriage, then took a shot at a children’s book three years ago. “My
husband is floating on air,” she said after the ceremony. Winners each
received $10,000. Garrison Keillor hosted and honorary medals went to
Mailer and Lawrence Ferlinghetti. The awards, now in their 56th year,
are sponsored by the National Book Foundation, a non-profit organization
that uses money raised by the ceremony to fund its educational programs. |