Skip to main content
For distinguished fiction published in book form during the year by an American author, preferably dealing with American life, Five thousand dollars ($5,000).

The Hours, by Michael Cunningham (Farrar, Straus & Giroux)

Columbia University Provost Jonathan R. Cole (right) presents Michael Cunningham with the 1999 Pulitzer Prize in Fiction.

Winning Work

The Hours

In The Hours, Michael Cunningham, who is recognized as 'one of our very best writers' (Richard Eder, Los Angeles Times), draws inventively on the life and work of Virginia Woolf to tell the story of a group of contemporary characters who are struggling with the conflicting claims of love and inheritance, hope and despair

The novel opens with an evocation of Woolf's last days before her suicide in 1941, and moves to the stories of two modern American women who are trying to make rewarding lives for themselves in spite of the demands of friends, lovers, and family.

Clarissa Vaughan is a book editor who lives in present-day Greenwich Village; when we meet her, she is buying flowers to display at a party for her friend Richard, an ailing poet who has just won a major literary prize. Laura Brown is a housewife in postwar California who is bringing up her only son and looking for her true life outside of her stifling marriage.

With rare ease and assurance, Cunningham makes the two womens lives converge with Virginia Woolf's in an unexpected and heart-breaking way during the party for Richard. As the novel jump-cuts through the twentieth century every line resonates with Cunningham's clear, strong. surprisingly lyrical contemporary voice.

Passionate, profound and deeply moving, The Hours is Michael Cunningham's most remarkable achievement to date.

(From the book jacket)

Copyright: 1997, Farrar

 

Biography

Michael Cunningham was born in Cincinnati, Ohio, in 1952 and grew up in Pasadena. California. He received his BA in English literature from Stanford University and his M.F.A. from the University of Iowa. His novel A Home at the End of the World was published by FSG in 1990 to wide acclaim. Flesh and Blood, another novel, followed in 1995. His work has appeared in The Atlantic Monthly, Redbook, Esquire, The Paris Review, The New Yorker, Vogue, and Metropolitan Home. His story "White Angel" was chosen for Best American Short Stories 1989. He received a Guggenheim Fellowship in 1993, a National Endowment for the Arts Fellowship in 1988, and a Michener Fellowship from the University of Iowa in 1982.

Michael Cunningham currently lives in New York City.

Finalists

Nominated as finalists in Fiction in 1999:

The Jury

Diane Johnson(chair )

novelist

Richard Eder*

book critic

Winners in Fiction

1999 Prize Winners

Duke Ellington

Bestowed posthumously, commemorating the centennial year of his birth, in recognition of his musical genius, which evoked aesthetically the principles of democracy through the medium of jazz and thus made an indelible contribution to art and culture.

Chuck Philips and Michael A. Hiltzik

For their stories on corruption in the entertainment industry, including a charity sham sponsored by the National Academy of Recording Arts and Sciences, illegal detoxification programs for wealthy celebrities, and a resurgence of radio payola.

Staff

For its clear and detailed coverage of a shooting rampage in which a state lottery worker killed four supervisors then himself.