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The Pulitzer
Prize for Letters
The
Pulitzer Prize is named in honor of Joseph Pulitzer a newspaper publisher
in the late 19th century. The awards were established in 1917 and are
governed by the Pulitzer Prize Board and awarded by Columbia University.
Awards are given in 21 categories for journalism, drama, music, and letters.
Biography
or Autobiography | Drama
| Fiction | General
Nonfiction | History |
Poetry | Special
Citations and Awards - Letters
Special
Citations and Awards - Letters
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- 2007
- Ray Bradbury
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- 1992
- Art Spiegelman for Maus
- It
is the story of Vladek Speigelman, a Jewish survivor of Hitler's
Europe, and his son, a cartoonist coming to terms with his
father's story. Maus approaches the unspeakable through the
diminutive. Its form, the cartoon (the Nazis are cats, the
Jews mice), shocks us out of any lingering sense of familiarity.
Maus is a haunting tale within a tale.
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- 1984
- Theodor
Seuss Geisel AKA Dr. Seuss
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- 1978
- E.B.
White
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- 1977
- Alex Haley for Roots
- Roots begins with a birth in 1750, in an African village;
it ends seven generations later at the Arkansas funeral of
a black professor whose children are a teacher, a Navy architect,
an assistant director of the U.S. Information Agency, and
an author.
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- 1973
- James Thomas Flexner for George
Washington, Vols. I-IV
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- 1961
- American
Heritage Picture History of the Civil War
- Pulitzer-prize winning author Catton presents the drama
and sweep of a nation at war, with illustrations that range
from photos by Matthew Brady to sketches by soldiers at the
front.
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- 1960
- Garrett Mattingly for The
Armada
- The book covers Queen Elizabeth's reign over a turbulent
nation, while the Duke of Parma plans the invasion of England
from the Netherlands. The crucial period from February 1587
to December 1588 is presented in a series of detailed, dramatic
scenes. The second part of the book is devoted to the naval
battle from the first sight of the Armada off the Scilly Isles
to the return of its broken remnants to the ports of Spain.
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- 1957
- Kenneth
Roberts
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- 1944
- Richard Rodgers and Oscar Hammerstein II for Oklahoma
- A couple of young cowboys win the love of their sweethearts
in the Oklahoma territory at the turn of the century, despite
the interference of an evil ranch hand and a roaming peddler
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