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Denis Johnson wins National Book Award
Hillel Italie
NEW YORK—Denis Johnson’s “Tree of Smoke,” a 600-page journey through the
physical, moral and spiritual extremes of the Vietnam War and its
aftermath, won the National Book Award for fiction Wednesday night. “I’m
very sorry to miss this one chance to dress up in a tuxedo in front of
so many representatives in the world of literature, and say thank you to
the people who have given me my life,” the author said in a statement
read by his wife, Cindy.
The 58-year-old Johnson, who lives in New Mexico, rarely talks to the
media and is currently writing on assignment in Iraq. It was the fifth
time in the past eight years that an author published by Farrar, Straus
& Giroux has won in fiction, with previous works including Jonathan
Franzen’s “The Corrections” and Richard Powers’ “The Echo Maker.” Other
National Book Award winners Wednesday night, each of whom received
$10,000, were Tim Weiner’s “Legacy of Ashes: The History of the CIA” for
nonfiction, Sherman Alexie’s “The Absolutely True Diary of a Part-Time
Indian” for young people’s literature, and former U.S. poet laureate
Robert Hass’ “Time and Materials” for poetry.
Joan Didion and National Public Radio host Terry Gross were presented
honorary medals. Didion, who two years ago won the National Book Award
in nonfictions for “The Year of Magical Thinking,” noted that Norman
Mailer had been at that ceremony. Mailer, who died Saturday at age 84,
was “someone who really ... knew what writing was for,” Didion said.
Mailer also was praised by Hass, who recalled giving a poetry reading
decades ago at Mailer’s home and how “enormously generous he (Mailer)
was to young writers.”
Johnson’s novel, which he has said he first thought of in the early
1980s, has been widely praised since coming out this fall. It tells of
spies, counterspies and others caught up in the blur and horror of
Vietnam from the day after President Kennedy was shot to the early
1980s. For fans of Johnson’s “Jesus’ Son” and other works, it’s a
recognizable story of the certainty of exploration and suffering and the
hope for salvation. |