Five Pulitzer-Winning Books to Read This Labor Day
From Gregory Pardlo to Annie Dillard, Pulitzer winners have grappled with the meaning and rewards of work.
From Gregory Pardlo to Annie Dillard, Pulitzer winners have grappled with the meaning and rewards of work.
Read the 1983 History finalist's account of the drafting of the Declaration of Independence.
From Ray Bradbury's summer idylls to Thomas Jefferson's slaveholding legacy, explore the complexity and contradictions of America's birthday with Pulitzer-winning work on this summer reading list.
A redesigned entry site features a questionnaire about entrants' work, and the ability for Drama and Music entrants to submit materials online.
From a biography of Paul Revere to masterpieces of poetic modernism, revisit these women-authored Pulitzer classics.
The Biography, History and General Nonfiction prize categories offer a variety of lenses through which to view race in the U.S. and African-American experiences.
The online entry form and payment mechanism closed at the deadline. Hard copies of books that accompany otherwise complete entries will be accepted until October 15.
'I wanted readers to know we have this wonderful living, giving sea and we’ve taken a lot from that sea. But to continue to doing so we have to give back,' 'The Gulf' author said.
We collected interviews, lectures and readings featuring the work of this year's Pulitzer winners in Letters, Drama and Music: Andrew Sean Greer, Martyna Majok, Jack E. Davis, Caroline Fraser, Frank Bidart, James Forman Jr. and Kendrick Lamar.
Video of David M. Oshinsky, Daniel Walker Howe and Alan Taylor's lectures is now available online.