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For distinguished fiction published in book form during the year by an American author, preferably dealing with American life, Ten thousand dollars ($10,000).

Gilead, by Marilynne Robinson (Farrar)

Lee Bollinger and Marilynne Robinson

Columbia University President Lee C. Bollinger presents Marilynne Robinson with the 2005 Pulitzer Prize in Fiction.

Winning Work

Gilead

In 1956, toward the end of Reverend John Ames's life, he begins a letter to his young son, an account of himself and his forebears. Ames is the son of an Iowan preacher and the grandson of a minister who, as a young man in Maine, saw a vision of Christ bound in chains and came west to Kansas to fight for abolition: He "preached men into the Civil War," then, at age fifty, became a chaplain in the Union Army, losing his right eye in battle. Reverend Ames writes to his son about the tension between his father--an ardent pacifist--and his grandfather, whose pistol and bloody shirts, concealed in an army blanket, may be relics from the fight between the abolitionists and those settlers who wanted to vote Kansas into the union as a slave state. And he tells a story of the sacred bonds between fathers and sons, which are tested in his tender and strained relationship with his namesake, John Ames Boughton, his best friend's wayward son.

This is also the tale of another remarkable vision--not a corporeal vision of God but the vision of life as a wondrously strange creation. It tells how wisdom was forged in Ames's soul during his solitary life, and how history lives through generations, pervasively present even when betrayed and forgotten.

Gilead is the long-hoped-for second novel by one of our finest writers, a hymn of praise and lamentation to the God-haunted existence that Reverend Ames loves passionately, and from which he will soon part.

Biography

Marilynne Robinson is the author of the modern classic Housekeeping (FSG, 1981) which won the PEN/Hemingway Award and the Richard and Hinda Rosenthal Award from the Academy of American Arts and Letters, and was nominated for the Pulitzer Prize. Robinson received a Lila Acheson Wallace Reader's Digest Grant in 1991 and the prestigious Mildred and Harold Strauss Living from the American Academy of Arts in 1998. She is also the author of two books of nonfiction, Mother Country (FSG), 1989) andThe Death of Adam.

She teaches at the University of Iowa Writers' Workshop.

Finalists

Nominated as finalists in Fiction in 2005:

The Jury

Rebecca Pepper Sinkler(chair )

former editor

Marie Arana

book editor

Alan Lightman

adjunct professor of humanities

Winners in Fiction

2005 Prize Winners

Staff

For its comprehensive, clear-headed coverage of the resignation of New Jersey's governor after he announced he was gay and confessed to adultery with a male lover.