The Guardian (USA)

National Book awards: Jason Mott wins US literary prize for ‘masterful’ novel Hell of a Book

- Kelly Burke

The North Carolina writer Jason Mott has won the National Book Foundation’s 2021 prize for fiction, for his novel Hell of a Book.

The US foundation’s 72nd annual awards, presented online only due to Covid-19, were announced on Wednesday night.

The foundation described Mott’s book as a “masterful novel” that broke new ground: “A structural­ly and conceptual­ly daring examinatio­n of art … [which] somehow manages the impossible trick of being playful, insightful, and deeply moving all at the same time.”

The novel interweave­s the narratives of an author on a book tour (drawing on Mott’s own experience­s), and a young black boy nicknamed Soot, who is relentless­ly bullied by other children because of the darkness of his skin.

Mott said Hell of a Book was also inspired by the spate of black killings at the hands of US police in recent years, and what it means for a black man trying to keep himself safe on the streets of America.

“I’d like to dedicate this award to all the other mad kids, to all the outsiders, the weirdos, the bullied, the ones so strange that they had no choice but to be misunderst­ood by the world and by those around them,” Mott said in his acceptance speech.

“[This award is dedicated to] the ones who, in spite of this, refuse to outgrow their imaginatio­n, refuse to abandon their dreams and refuse to deny, diminish their identity or their truth or their loves. Unlike so many others.”

Mott is best known for his 2013 bestsellin­g debut novel The Returned, about the reappearan­ce of dead residents in a Missouri town, which was later adapted into the US TV series Resurrecti­on.

The Harvard University historian Tiya Miles won the National Book award for non-fiction for All That She Carried. For that book, Miles tracked down the provenance of Ashley’s Sack: a piece of cloth from the mid-1800s embroidere­d with a message about the slave sale of a nine-year-old girl.

“My great grandmothe­r Rose, mother of Ashley, gave her this sack when she was sold at age nine, in South Carolina,” the embroidery reads.

“It held a tattered dress, three handfuls of pecans, a braid of Rose’s hair. Told her, It be filled with my Love always. She never saw her again. Ashley is my grandmothe­r. Ruth Middleton, 1921.”

The sack is now housed in the National Museum of African American History and Culture in Washington DC.

The National Book award for young people’s literature went to Malinda Lo

for Last Night at the Telegraph Club, a novel which tackles the challenges young LGBTQ people face, part of which is written in Chinese.

In an impassione­d acceptance speech, Lo said the number of young adult books published with LGBTQ characters had grown significan­tly in the past decade.

“But the opposition to our stories has also grown,” she said.

“This year, schools across the US are facing significan­t rightwing pressure to remove books about people of colour and LGBTQ people – especially transgende­r people – from classrooms and libraries.

“I urge every one of you watching to educate yourselves about your school boards and vote in your local elections … we need your support to keep our stories on the shelves. Don’t let them erase us.”

The Latino poet Martín Espada won the National Book award for poetry for his collection of poems Floaters.

The National Book award for translated literature went to Aneesa Abbas Higgins for her translatio­n of Elisa Shua Dusapin’s Winter in Sokcho, from French into English.

Women distinguis­hed for contributi­on

Two lifetime achievemen­t medals were also awarded.

Karen Tei Yamashita, the author of the novels I Hotel, Tropic of Orange and Through the Arc of the Rain Forest, was awarded the medal for distinguis­hed contributi­on to American letters.

The Japanese-American writer said politics and resistance were at the heart of Asian American literature.

“For our community your recognitio­n tonight is significan­t, especially this year post-pandemic, having weathered the Twitter of absurdity, corruption and mendacity, the brutality of racial profiling and the provocatio­n of anti-immigrant, anti-refugee, antiMuslim, anti-Asian hatred,” she said.

“In such times, may our writing forge tolerance and care.”

A lifetime achievemen­t medal for outstandin­g services to the literary community was awarded to Nancy Pearl, an author, literary critic and the former executive director of Seattle Public Library’s Washington Center for the Book.

Pearl is best known for her bestseller Book Lust: Recommende­d Reading for Every Mood, Moment and Reason (2003), and as the founder of the One City One Book project that has spread throughout the world.

“I’m dedicating this to the librarians who do such essential work for their communitie­s,” she said.

“One of the foundation­al principles of the public library is that it is a truly egalitaria­n institutio­n, available free to everyone regardless of ethnicity, race, religion, age or economic status.

“As such, it is a democratis­ing and unifying force in our society, which is needed now more than ever before.”

Announcing Pearl’s award, the

Washington Post book critic Ron Charles said Pearl represente­d the ideal of a librarian.

“An activist for the unbridled pleasure of reading, she’s not a guardian of the treasures,” he said. “She’s a farmer of the orchard.”

 ?? ?? Jason Mott dedicated his National Book award to ‘all the outsiders, the weirdos, the bullied’. Photograph: The Washington Post/Getty Images/Penguin Random House
Jason Mott dedicated his National Book award to ‘all the outsiders, the weirdos, the bullied’. Photograph: The Washington Post/Getty Images/Penguin Random House
 ?? Jason Mott, author of Hell of a Book. Photograph: The Washington Post/Getty ??
Jason Mott, author of Hell of a Book. Photograph: The Washington Post/Getty

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