
2002 National Book Award Winners AnnouncedNov 21, 2002
Julia Glass took home the Fiction award for her debut novel, Three Junes
(Pantheon Books), a May/June Book Sense 76 pick; Nancy Farmer won the Young
People's Literature award for The House of the Scorpion (A Richard Jackson
Book/Atheneum Books for Young Readers), a Winter 2002-2003 Children's Book Sense
76 Top Ten pick; Ruth Stone won in the Poetry category for In the Next Galaxy
(Copper Canyon Press); and Robert A. Caro won the Nonfiction award for Master
of the Senate: The Years of Lyndon Johnson (Alfred A. Knopf). Though the affair was hosted by a renowned comedian, it was the 87-year-old
poet Ruth Stone who garnered the most laughs with her self-deprecating and obviously
unrehearsed acceptance speech. "I think you probably gave [this award]
to me because I'm old," she remarked. "I'd like to thank my editor
-- whose name I can't remember right now! The printers and the publishers are
very important -- sometimes you think they do it for the money, but they really
don't make a lot of money." Prior to the awards ceremony, Stone told BTW that she was "really
surprised" to be nominated. "I had no idea," she said. "I'm
not a publishing freak, I never think about [publishing books]. I really don't,
but every so often it will be suggested to me [to publish a book]. I write all
the time." Fiction winner Glass didn't expect to be nominated, either. To inform Glass
she'd been nominated, National Book Foundation Executive Director Neil Baldwin
looked her up in the phone book, she told BTW. "I was like, Who
is this guy? He told me the news, and I said, Please don't tell me this is a
crank call," Glass said with a laugh. In her acceptance speech, Glass remarked, "I think I've felt emotions
this intense only two other times in my life -- when my newborn babies were
put in my arms -- except a whole lot fewer people were watching then
.
Books are like these amazing objects, that transmute themselves into something
completely different when you read them -- they could be a sailing vessel
a tree house
or a friend that tells you the facts of life too early and
all wrong." Young People's Literature winner Nancy Farmer told BTW, "I was
surprised to be nominated -- you're always surprised." She told the crowd
that she was thrilled to win the award. "I just feel like the moon was
in the right phase and the planets were all lined up. We all could have won,"
she said. Sonny Mehta of Knopf accepted the Nonfiction award for Robert Caro, who left
the ceremony before the award announcement for personal reasons. Earlier in
the evening, Caro spoke to BTW about the prospects of winning an NBA.
"We'll see," he said. "I've been nominated before. You always
hope [to win], though." He is currently working on the fourth book of his
Lyndon Johnson series. Prior to the awards announcement, the National Book Foundation presented the
Medal for Distinguished Contribution to American Letters to author Philip Roth.
In introducing the 69-year-old Roth, Martin listed the author's numerous literary
awards, including a National Book Award for his very first novel, Goodbye,
Columbus, when the author was only 27. "But that doesnt impress
me," Martin said. "Where's his Golden Globe award, or his Emmy? Where's
his hit sitcom, 'Philip'?" Then, on a more serious note, Martin said, "To
read Philip Roth properly you have to allow yourself to become overwhelmed.
We are grateful to this writer for not sparing us the facts." Roth was then greeted with a standing ovation. "I am honored and delighted,
and I accept your award in the highest spirit," he said. He then spoke
about his life as a Jewish boy growing in Newark, New Jersey, but one who would
not constrain himself with the label of Jewish American or American Jew. "As
a novelist, I think of myself as a free American" able to be what he chooses
to be, and write what he wants to in a native tongue in which "he is most
gratefully enslaved." A theme running through this year's award ceremonies was how one book can affect
a person's life. On the National Book Foundation Web site, NBA nominees discussed
the book that changed their lives, and each attendee received a paperback, The
Book That Changed My Life (Modern Library, for the National Book Foundation),
edited by Diane Osen, which features authors such as James Carroll and E.L.
Doctorow discussing the books that influenced them. Additionally, Ingram Book Group sponsored a "The Book That Changed My
Life" essay contest, in which it asked booksellers to describe, in just
250 words, the book that most affected their lives. The winner of the contest was Shawn Wathen of Chapter One Book Store in Hamilton,
Montana, who won an all-expense paid trip to New York and to the award ceremony
for his essay on the book Collected Poems, 1931-1987, by Czech poet Czeslaw
Milosz. During the ceremony, Martin introduced Wathan to the crowd. After struggling
through Milosz's name, the comedian remarked, "Okay, now I can have another
drink." For his part, Wathan said the honor came as a complete shock. "When I initially composed the essay it was 530 words, so I had to do some cutting," he told BTW. "Im thrilled beyond belief." --David Grogan
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