The Guardian (USA)

Pulitzer 2024 winners include Jayne Anne Phillips, ProPublica, AP and New York Times

- Benjamin Lee

This year’s Pulitzer winners include the New York Times and ProPublica as well as authors including Jayne Anne Phillips and Jonathan Eig.

The Pulitzers honored the best in journalism from 2023 in 15 categories, as well as eight arts categories focused on books, music and theater. The public service winner receives a gold medal.

All other winners receive $15,000.

The Associated Press won a Pulitzer prize in feature photograph­y for its coverage of global migration through Latin America to the US while the New York Times and Reuters news service each won Pulitzers for their coverage of the 7 October Hamas attack on Israel and its aftermath.

The Pulitzers’ prestigiou­s award in public service went to ProPublica for reporting that “pierced the thick wall of secrecy” around the US supreme court to show how billionair­es gave gifts and travel to justices.

The Pulitzers also issued special citations to journalist­s and writers covering the war in Gaza, and to the late hip-hop critic Greg Tate.

The staff of the New York Times won for its “wide-ranging and revelatory coverage” of Hamas’s 7 October attack on Israel, the intelligen­ce failures by Israel and the country’s response in Gaza.

The Times’s Hannah Dreier won a Pulitzer in investigat­ive reporting for her stories on migrant child labor across the United States. The contributi­ng writer Katie Engelhart won the newspaper’s third Pulitzer, in feature writing, for her portrait of a family struggling with a matriarch’s dementia.

The Washington Post staff won in national reporting for its “sobering examinatio­n” of the AR-15 semi-automatic rifle, which came with some gutwrenchi­ng photos. The Post’s David E Hoffman won in editorial writing for a “compelling and well-researched” series on how authoritar­ian regimes repress dissent in the digital age. Its third award went to contributo­r Vladimir Kara-Murza, for commentari­es written from a Russian prison cell.

The public service award hon

ored the ProPublica reporters Joshua Kaplan, Justin Elliott, Brett Murphy, Alex Mierjeski and Kirsten Berg, whose stories prompted the supreme court to adopt its first code of conduct.

The New Yorker magazine won two Pulitzers. Sarah Stillman won in explanator­y reporting for her report on the legal system’s reliance on felony murder charges. Medar de la Cruz, a contributo­r, won in illustrate­d reporting and commentary for his story humanizing inmates in the Rikers Island jail in New York City.

Jayne Anne Phillips’ Night Watch, a mother-daughter saga set in a West Virginia asylum after the civil war, won the Pulitzer Prize for fiction. The drama prize was awarded to Eboni Booth’s Primary Trust, about a bookstore worker’s unexpected journey after he loses his job.

Nathan Thrall’s A Day in the Life of Abed Salama: Anatomy of a Jerusalem Tragedy won for general nonfiction, history prize for No Right to an Honest

Living: The Struggles of Boston’s Black

Workers in the Civil War Era.

Two winners were announced on Monday in the biography category: Jonathan Eig for his Martin Luther King biography King: A Life and Ilyon Woo for Master Slave Husband Wife: An Epic Journey from Slavery to Freedom. Cristina Rivera Garza’s investigat­ion into the murder of her sister, Liliana’s Invincible Summer: A Sister’s Search for Justice, won for memoir-autobiogra­phy, while Brandon Som’s Tripas received the poetry prize.

Tyshawn Sorey’s saxophone concerto Adagio (For Wadada Leo Smith) was the winner for music.

The Pulitzers are administer­ed by Columbia University in New York, which itself has been in the news for student demonstrat­ions against the war in Gaza. The Pulitzer board met away from Columbia this past weekend to deliberate on its winners.

 ?? Photograph: Eric Gay/AP ?? A woman carries her child after she and other migrants crossed the Rio Grande into the US. Theimage was part of a series by Associated Press photograph­ers that won the 2024 Pulitzer prize for feature photograph­y. and Jacqueline Jones received the
Photograph: Eric Gay/AP A woman carries her child after she and other migrants crossed the Rio Grande into the US. Theimage was part of a series by Associated Press photograph­ers that won the 2024 Pulitzer prize for feature photograph­y. and Jacqueline Jones received the

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