No Pulitzer Prize in fiction this year.
At least that fact made the news. A brief excerpt from the article in Salon:
The news that no Pulitzer Prize for fiction would be awarded this year came like a slap across the face to a book world still reeling from a Department of Justice suit filed against publishers trying to forestall an Amazon e-book monopoly. Double ouch! But does the Pulitzer snub mean that no good fiction was published in America last year?
I would (and have) argued otherwise, most strenuously; 2011 was an exceptional year for fiction, American and otherwise. I also suspect that the Pulitzer Board itself has not turned up its collective nose at every book produced by American novelists and short story writers in 2011. The Pulitzer Prize may wield far more clout with book buyers than any other American prize for fiction. It can turn an obscure title into a success and a modestly successful title into a bestseller. Readers take it seriously and snap up the books it honors by the thousands. But that doesnt mean that the Pulitzer Prize for fiction doesnt suffer from the same problems that afflict every literary prize, no matter its size or influence.
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The first tier is the jurys selection. Three jurors (usually an academic, a critic and a fiction writer) are responsible for wading through huge boxfuls of books. Anyone can submit his or her book to the Pulitzer competition for a small fee, and believe me: anyone does. We got hundreds and hundreds of them, including many self-published novels with titles like The Bikinis of Alpha Centauri, most of which read as if theyd been run through Google Translate into Farsi and then run back again into English before being committed to print.
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Chances are good that the three novels recommended by this years Pulitzer jury Swamplandia! by Karen Russell, Train Dreams by Denis Johnson, and The Pale King by David Foster Wallace are the only three serious new novels many of the board members read last year, apart, perhaps, from one or two others. These people are, after all, pretty busy doing things like editing the Denver Post and running the Columbia Graduate School of Journalism, jobs that are a lot more time-consuming than they used to be, as well as selecting the winners in the other Pulitzer categories.
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