The Donald Windham Sandy M. Campbell Literature Prizes | |
---|---|
Awarded for | to call attention to literary achievement and provide writers the opportunity to focus on their work independent of financial concerns |
Date | 2024 |
Country | United States |
Presented by | Beinecke Rare Book & Manuscript Library |
Reward(s) | 175,000 USD |
First awarded | 4 March 2013 |
Website | windhamcampbell |
The Donald Windham Sandy M. Campbell Literature Prizes are an American literary award which offers unrestricted grants in four categories, namely fiction, nonfiction, poetry and drama. Established at Yale University in 2011, the first prizes were presented in 2013. [1] [2] [3] Administered by the Beinecke Rare Book & Manuscript Library, the award recognizes English language writers from across the world. The mission of the award is to call attention to literary achievement and provide writers the opportunity to focus on their work independent of financial concerns. In 2017 the category of poetry was added and eight prizes have been awarded annually since then.
Since 2023, winners receive a citation, award and an unrestricted grant of $175,000. The individual prizes are among the richest literary prize amounts in the world, if not the richest in certain categories. [1] The award is endowed from the combined estates of writer Donald Windham and actor Sandy Campbell. Campbell was Windham's companion of 45 years, and when Campbell died in 1988 he left his estate to Windham with the understanding a literary award would be created from the combined estate after Windham's death. [1] Windham died in 2010, and in 2011 Yale announced they would become administrators of the new award.
The inaugural winners were announced on March 4, 2013, and a ceremony conferring the awards took place at Yale on September 10, 2013 with the nine recipients receiving a citation, award and an unrestricted grant of $150,000 each. [4]
Year | Category | Recipient | Country | Ref. |
---|---|---|---|---|
2013 [2] [3] [5] [6] [7] [lower-alpha 1] | Drama | Stephen Adly Guirgis : "Stephen Adly Guirgis writes dramatic dialogue with passion and humor, creating characters who live on the edge, and whose linguistic bravado reinvigorates the American vernacular." | United States | [8] |
Tarell Alvin McCraney : "Tarell Alvin McCraney’s working class characters inhabit an extraordinary mythic universe, speaking a poetic language through which we grasp the spiritual stature of embattled people." | United States | [9] | ||
Naomi Wallace : "Naomi Wallace mines historical situations in plays that are muscular, devastating, and unwavering." | United States | [10] | ||
Fiction | Tom McCarthy : "Tom McCarthy constructs strange worlds where we find reflective echoes of our own and meditations on the meaning and making of art." | United Kingdom | [11] | |
James Salter : "Sentence by sentence, James Salter’s elegantly natural prose has a precision and clarity which make ordinary words swing wide open." | United States | [12] | ||
Zoë Wicomb : "Zoë Wicomb’s subtle, lively language and beautifully crafted narratives explore the complex entanglements of home, and the continuing challenges of being in the world." | South Africa | [13] | ||
Non-Fiction | Adina Hoffman : "In a land where even the most cautious nonfiction can draw howls of protest, Adina Hoffman combines fastidious listening, even-handed research, and prose so engaged that it makes the long-vanished visible again." | United States | [14] | |
Jeremy Scahill : "Jeremy Scahill’s investigative reporting is in the best tradition of speaking truth to power, waging a political campaign by journalistic means, indefatigable in its detail and international in outlook." | United States | [15] | ||
Jonny Steinberg : "Using a novelistic style that gives everyday people heroic complexity and scale, Jonny Steinberg allows us to encounter lives that enlarge our empathy and sharpen our understanding of the human condition." | South Africa | [16] | ||
2014 [17] [18] [lower-alpha 2] | Drama | Kia Corthron : "Through her command of dramatic spectacle, Kia Corthron places often unheard and marginalized characters within a historical and political context that gives their lives an urgent and poetic resonance." | United States | [19] |
Sam Holcroft : "Sam Holcroft’s plays explore the routinized and expressive registers of language, gesture, and role-playing, walking the uncomfortably thin line between spectatorship and complicity." | United Kingdom | [20] | ||
Noëlle Janaczewska : "Noëlle Janaczewska brings innovative stagecraft and a questioning voice to plays that translate cultural and political tensions into drama as complex as it is illuminating." | Australia | [21] | ||
Fiction | Nadeem Aslam : "Nadeem Aslam’s deftly crafted novels explore historical and political trauma with lyricism and profound compassion." | Pakistan / United Kingdom | [22] | |
Jim Crace : "Jim Crace's ever-varied novels return us to the body, to ceremony and to community in a disenchanted world, transforming the indifferent and the repugnant alike into things of beauty." | United Kingdom | [23] | ||
Aminatta Forna : "Aminatta Forna writes through and beyond personal experience to speak to the wider world in subtly constructed narratives that reveal the ongoing aftershocks of living through violence and war." | Sierra Leone / United Kingdom | [24] | ||
Non-Fiction | Pankaj Mishra : "Pursuing high standards of literary style, Pankaj Mishra gives us new narratives about the evolution of modern Asia. He charts the journey from the Indian small town to the metropolis and rebuffs imperialist clichés with equal verve." | India | [25] | |
John Vaillant : "John Vaillant writes gripping narratives that combine science, geography, history and anthropology to convey his passionate commitment to preserving natural resources in an environmentally threatened world." | United States / Canada | [26] | ||
2015 [27] [28] [29] [lower-alpha 3] | Drama | Jackie Sibblies Drury : "Jackie Sibblies Drury deftly blends historical inquiry and meta-theatrical experiment to challenge assumptions about race, performance, and individual responsibility." | United States | [30] |
Helen Edmundson : "Helen Edmundson’s ambitious plays distill historical complexities through characters whose passions and ethical dilemmas mirror and illuminate a larger political landscape." | United Kingdom | [31] | ||
Debbie Tucker Green : "Pushing speech and silence to the limit, Debbie Tucker Green’s plays expose the brutal choices of individuals bound by the imperatives of family, society, and love." | United Kingdom | [32] | ||
Fiction | Teju Cole : "Teju Cole’s peripatetic narrators, like his prose, revel in the possibilities and limitations of global urbanity, navigating the fine line between choice and circumstance, perception and memory." | United States / Nigeria | [33] | |
Helon Habila : "Helon Habila is that rare combination of storyteller and stylist who challenges expectations while deepening our empathy for ordinary people confronting extraordinary times." | Nigeria | [34] | ||
Ivan Vladislavic : "Ivan Vladislavić’s fiction explores the uncomfortable aftermath of apartheid through inventive meditations on the complex intersection of history, politics, and art." | South Africa | [35] | ||
Non-Fiction | Edmund de Waal : "Edmund de Waal’s sure narrative instinct and lyrical imagination inform a deeply felt examination of the hold that objects have on our personal and collective memory." | United Kingdom | [36] | |
Geoff Dyer : "Omnivorously curious and psychologically probing, Geoff Dyer’s writings reinvent again and again the possibilities of nonfiction, discovering as many new subjects as he does ways of writing about them." | United Kingdom | [37] | ||
John Jeremiah Sullivan : "John Jeremiah Sullivan’s wide-ranging, exuberant essays engage the full spectrum of American life with passion, precision, and wit." | United States | [38] | ||
2016 [39] [40] [41] [lower-alpha 4] | Drama | Branden Jacobs-Jenkins : An Octoroon and War | United States | [42] |
Hannah Moscovitch : East of Berlin | Canada | [43] | ||
Abbie Spallen : Lally the Scut (2015) and Pumpgirl (2006) | Ireland | [44] | ||
Fiction | Tessa Hadley : Clever Girl (2013) and The Past (2016) | United Kingdom | [45] | |
C. E. Morgan : All the Living | United States | [46] | ||
Jerry Pinto : Em and the Big Hoom | India | [47] | ||
Non-Fiction | Hilton Als : White Girls (2013) and The Women (1996) | United States | [48] | |
Stanley Crouch : Don’t the Moon Look Lonesome? | United States | [49] | ||
Helen Garner : This House of Grief (2014) | Australia | [50] [51] | ||
2017 [52] [lower-alpha 5] | Drama | Marina Carr | Ireland | [53] |
Ike Holter | United States | [54] | ||
Fiction | André Alexis | Canada / Trinidad and Tobago | [55] | |
Erna Brodber | Jamaica | [56] | ||
Non-Fiction | Maya Jasanoff | United States | [57] | |
Ashleigh Young | New Zealand | [58] | ||
Poetry | Ali Cobby Eckermann | Australia | [59] [60] [61] | |
Carolyn Forché | United States | [62] | ||
2018 [63] [64] [65] [66] [lower-alpha 6] | Drama | Lucas Hnath for "agile writing which ranges across genres and subjects with voracious curiosity; his wit, formal daring and poetic precision crystallize dramas that are socially incisive and indelible." Works include The Christians (2014) and A Doll's House, Part 2 (2017). | United States | [67] |
Suzan-Lori Parks : for being "an artist whose ethical imagination confronts rather than consoles; she acknowledges in the fissures of language and human relations the complexities of a fraught world." Works include The Death of Last Black Man in the Whole Entire World (1992), Venus (1996), Topdog/Underdog (2001), and Father Comes Home from the Wars (Parts 1, 2 & 3) (2014). | United States | [68] | ||
Fiction | John Keene : for writing that "[w]ith coruscating imagination, language and thought, …experiments with concealed scenes from history and literature, stepping outside the confines of conventional narrative." Works include Annotations (1995) and Counternarratives (2015). | United States | [69] | |
Jennifer Nansubuga Makumbi : for work that "opens up a bold and innovatory vista in African letters, encompassing ancient wounds that disquiet the present, and offering the restitution to be found in memory and ritual." She is the author of the novel Kintu (2014). | Uganda / United Kingdom | [70] | ||
Non-Fiction | Sarah Bakewell for work that "unknots complex philosophical thought with verve and wit; her eye for detail and her animated conversation bring readers to inhabit the lives of great philosophers." Works include How to Live: A Life of Montaigne (2010) and At the Existentialist Café (2016). | United Kingdom | [71] | |
Olivia Laing for being "a cartographer of human emotion, mixing memoir, biography and critical engagement with an acute sense of place; through the arts, she searches the depths of the self." Works include To the River (2011), The Trip to Echo Spring (2013), and The Lonely City (2016). | United Kingdom | [72] | ||
Poetry | Lorna Goodison for poetry that "draws us into a panoramic history of a woman’s life, bearing witness to female embodiment, the colonial legacy, mortality, and the sacred." She is the author of 13 collections of poetry including I Am Becoming My Mother (1986) and Oracabessa (2013). | Canada / Jamaica | [73] | |
Cathy Park Hong for poetry with "exhilarating and surprising language that connects us to unheard migrant voices, and her searching look at dystopic states which gives her poetry urgent power." Works include Dance Dance Revolution (2007) and Engine Empire (2012). | United States | [74] | ||
2019 [75] [76] [77] [lower-alpha 7] | Drama | Patricia Cornelius | Australia | [78] [79] |
Young Jean Lee | United States | [80] | ||
Fiction | David Chariandy | Canada | [81] | |
Danielle McLaughlin | Ireland | [82] | ||
Non-Fiction | Raghu Karnad | India | [83] | |
Rebecca Solnit | United States | [84] | ||
Poetry | Kwame Dawes | Ghana / Jamaica / United States | [85] | |
Ishion Hutchinson | Jamaica | [86] | ||
2020 [87] [88] [lower-alpha 8] | Drama | Julia Cho : "In stagecraft intimate with cadences of the spoken and unspoken, Julia Cho enlivens human connection in the languages of home and estrangement." | United States | [89] |
Aleshea Harris : "Aleshea Harris’s meticulous pageantries of brutal injustice vibrate with rage, grief, hope, and truth, breathing life into ancient forms and indelibly making seen those who were unseen." | United States | [90] | ||
Fiction | Yiyun Li : "Yiyun Li masterfully explores the landscape of loss with delicacy and precision, restoring the fractured lives of ordinary people on the margins, endowing them with agency and power." | United States | [91] | |
Namwali Serpell : "Namwali Serpell reimagines the transmission of modern history through the commingled lives of her Zambian characters, writing unerringly sure prose and re-enchanting the contemporary novel in the process." | United States / Zambia | [92] | ||
Non-Fiction | Anne Boyer : "With unflinching self-scrutiny, Anne Boyer exposes uncomfortable truths about our culture’s mistreatment of the individual in duress and the ways in which we are complicit in that neglect." | United States | [93] | |
Maria Tumarkin : "Maria Tumarkin's inventive writing on our current historical moment shows a relentless empathy and curiosity about the complexities of our world and its uncertainties." | Australia | [94] [95] | ||
Poetry | Bhanu Kapil : "Through transgressive, lyrical language Bhanu Kapil undoes multiple genres to excavate crucial questions of trauma, healing, immigration, and embodiment at the outskirts of performance and process." | United States / United Kingdom | [96] | |
Jonah Mixon-Webster : "With tenderness and ferocity, Jonah Mixon-Webster invents dynamic multi-modal forms to indict structural racism, and to connect the personal to the violence and beauty of history." | United States | [97] | ||
2021 [98] [99] [100] | Drama | Nathan Alan Davis | United States | [101] |
Michael R. Jackson | United States | [102] | ||
Fiction | Dionne Brand | Canada / Trinidad and Tobago | [103] | |
Renee Gladman | United States | [104] | ||
Non-fiction | Kate Briggs | United Kingdom / The Netherlands | [105] | |
Vivian Gornick | United States | [106] | ||
Poetry | Canisia Lubrin | Canada / Saint Lucia | [107] | |
Natalie Scenters-Zapico | United States | [108] | ||
2022 [109] [110] [lower-alpha 9] | Drama | Sharon Bridgforth | United States | [111] |
Winsome Pinnock | United Kingdom | [112] | ||
Fiction | Tsitsi Dangarembga | Zimbabwe | [113] | |
Siphiwe Gloria Ndlovu | Zimbabwe | [114] | ||
Non-fiction | Emmanuel Iduma | Nigeria | [115] | |
Margo Jefferson | United States | [116] | ||
Poetry | Zaffar Kunial | United Kingdom | [117] | |
Wong May | Ireland / Singapore / China | [118] | ||
2023 [119] [120] | Drama | Jasmine Lee-Jones | United Kingdom | [121] |
Dominique Morisseau | United States | [122] | ||
Fiction | Percival Everett | United States | [123] | |
Ling Ma | United States | [124] | ||
Non-fiction | Darran Anderson | Ireland / United Kingdom | [125] | |
Susan Williams | United Kingdom | [126] | ||
Poetry | Alexis Pauline Gumbs | United States | [127] | |
dg nanouk okpik | United States | [128] | ||
2024 [129] | Drama | Christopher Chen | United States | [130] |
Sonya Kelly | Ireland | [131] | ||
Fiction | Deirdre Madden | Ireland | [132] | |
Kathryn Scanlan | United States | [133] | ||
Non-fiction | Hanif Abdurraqib | United States | [134] | |
Christina Sharpe | Canada / United States | [135] | ||
Poetry | Jen Hadfield | Canada / United Kingdom | [136] | |
M. NourbeSe Philip | Canada / Trinidad and Tobago | [137] |
The John Llewellyn Rhys Prize was a literary prize awarded annually for the best work of literature by an author from the Commonwealth aged 35 or under, written in English and published in the United Kingdom. Established in 1942, it was one of the oldest literary awards in the UK.
The Guardian Children's Fiction Prize or Guardian Award was a literary award that annual recognised one fiction book written for children or young adults and published in the United Kingdom. It was conferred upon the author of the book by The Guardian newspaper, which established it in 1965 and inaugurated it in 1967. It was a lifetime award in that previous winners were not eligible. At least from 2000 the prize was £1,500. The prize was apparently discontinued after 2016, though no formal announcement appears to have been made.
The Astrid Lindgren Memorial Award is an international children's literary award established by the Swedish government in 2002 to honour the Swedish children's author Astrid Lindgren (1907–2002). The prize is five million SEK, making it the richest award in children's literature and one of the richest literary prizes in the world. The annual cost of 10 million SEK is financed with tax money.
The Victorian Premier's Prize for Poetry, formerly known as the C. J. Dennis Prize for Poetry, is a prize category in the annual Victorian Premier's Literary Award. As of 2011 it has an enumeration of A$25,000. The winner of this category prize vies with 4 other category winners for overall Victorian Prize for Literature valued at an additional A$100,000.
The Dylan Thomas Prize is a leading prize for young writers presented annually. The prize, named in honour of the Welsh writer and poet Dylan Thomas, brings international prestige and a remuneration of £30,000 (~$46,000). It is open to published writers in the English language under the age of forty. The prize was originally awarded biennially but became an annual award in 2010. Entries for the prize are submitted by the publisher, editor, or agent; for theatre plays and screenplays, by the producer.
Jonny Steinberg is a South African writer and scholar.
Yiyun Li is a Chinese-born writer and professor in the United States. Her short stories and novels have won several awards, including the PEN/Hemingway Award and Guardian First Book Award for A Thousand Years of Good Prayers, the 2020 PEN/Jean Stein Book Award for Where Reasons End, and the 2023 PEN/Faulkner Award for Fiction for The Book of Goose. She is an editor of the Brooklyn-based literary magazine A Public Space.
David John Chariandy is a Canadian writer and academic, presently working as a professor of English literature at Simon Fraser University. His 2017 novel Brother won the Rogers Writers' Trust Fiction Prize, Ethel Wilson Fiction Prize, and Toronto Book Award.
The Booktrust Teenage Prize was an annual award given to young adult literature published in the UK. The prize was administered by Book Trust, an independent charity which promotes books and reading. The Booktrust Teenage Prize was last awarded in 2010 and is no longer running.
The Victorian Premier's Prize for Nonfiction, formerly known as the Nettie Palmer Prize for Non-Fiction, is a prize category in the annual Victorian Premier's Literary Award. As of 2011 it has a remuneration of A$25,000. The winner of this category prize vies with 4 other category winners for overall Victorian Prize for Literature valued at an additional A$100,000.
TheWriters' Prize, previously known as the Rathbones Folio Prize, the Folio Prize and The Literature Prize, is a literary award that was sponsored by the London-based publisher The Folio Society for its first two years, 2014–2015. Starting in 2017, the sponsor was Rathbone Investment Management. At the 2023 award ceremony, it was announced that the prize was looking for new sponsorship as Rathbones would be ending their support. In November 2023, having failed to secure a replacement sponsor, the award's governing body announced its rebrand as The Writers' Prize.
The Victorian Premier's Unpublished Manuscript Award is a literary award for an unpublished manuscript. It can be entered by any author from the Australian State of Victoria that has not published a project based on fiction.
Kim Leine Rasmussen is a Danish-Norwegian author who writes about Greenland.
Namwali Serpell is an American and Zambian writer who teaches in the United States. In April 2014, she was named on Hay Festival's Africa39 list of 39 sub-Saharan African writers aged under 40 with the potential and talent to define trends in African literature. Her short story "The Sack" won the 2015 Caine Prize for African fiction in English. In 2020, Serpell won the Belles-lettres category Grand Prix of Literary Associations 2019 for her debut novel The Old Drift.
Raghu Karnad is an Indian journalist and writer, and a recipient of the Windham–Campbell Literature Prize for Non-Fiction. He is a 2022-'23 fellow at the Dorothy and Lewis B. Cullman Center for Scholars and Writers at the New York Public Library. His book, Farthest Field: An Indian Story of the Second World War, was awarded the Sahitya Akademi Yuva Puraskar for a writer in English in 2016, and shortlisted for the Hessell-Tiltman Prize in the same year. His articles and essays have won international awards including the Lorenzo Natali Journalism Prize in 2008, the Press Institute of India National Award for Reporting on the Victims of Armed Conflict in 2008, and a prize from the inaugural Financial Times-Bodley Head Essay Competition in 2012.
The Victorian Premier's Prize for Drama is a prize category in the annual Victorian Premier's Literary Awards. The winner of this category prize vies with four other category winners for overall Victorian Prize for Literature.
Ling Ma is a Chinese American novelist and assistant professor of practice in the Arts at the University of Chicago. Her first book, Severance, won a 2018 Kirkus Prize and was listed as a New York Times Notable Book of 2018 and shortlisted for the 2019 Hemingway Foundation/PEN Award. Her second book, Bliss Montage, won the National Book Critics Circle Award for Fiction and The Story Prize.
The Victorian Premier's Prize for Indigenous Writing is a prize category in the annual Victorian Premier's Literary Award. The award commenced in 2004 and in 2012 the prize was valued at A$20,000. The winner of this category prize competes with the other category winners for overall Victorian Prize for Literature valued at an additional A$100,000. Nominees are allowed to enter other categories of the Victorian Premier's Literary Awards.
The Costa Book Award for Novel, formerly known as the Whitbread Award (1971–2005), was an annual literary award for novels, as part of the Costa Book Awards.
The Costa Book Award for Children's Book, formerly known as the Whitbread Award (1971–2005), was an annual literary award for children's books, part of the Costa Book Awards, which were discontinued in 2022, the 2021 awards being the last made.