Joan Didion
The
Year of Magical Thinking Knopf
Acceptance
Speech
BRENDA
WINEAPPLE: Unfortunately, I was asked
to say a few words about the process of choosing
the nonfiction finalists. Fortunately, I can
think of only four words: Five hundred and forty-two.
That was the number of nominations this year,
the most, I’m told, ever. Terrific biographies,
eloquent histories, riveting memoirs, erudite
and charming books about physics and physicists,
about mathematics, about rock musicians and
paintings and painters, heart
piercing books
about Iraq and Vietnam and veterans of yesteryear,
about immigrants and travel and the myriad peoples
of America, about American
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Joan Didion
Photo credit: Robin Platzer/Twin Images |
presidents and power,
about women prisoners in courtrooms and crossword
puzzles and illness and trees and religions and
rugs, as well as books about marriage, about mountains,
about lightening and, of course, about that most
exciting of all endeavors, the writing life.
With such variety of
subject matter and style, ours then was a daunting,
humbling, often demoralizing task, true jury
duty. After a certain point, I talked to no
one, saw no one, went no place and for sustenance
depended completely on the four enormously talented
writers who for several months were the only
people on earth except my husband who knew,
understood and forgave the manic obsessiveness
that our task entailed. These extraordinary
judges are Mark Bowden, Dennis Covington, Tony
Horwitz and Gregory Wolfe. [Applause] I thank
them for their passion, their conviction, their
stubbornness, their equanimity, their incredibly
hard work and, best, for their ability to articulate
over and over what good writing means, what
it can do, how it changes us.
Together, we congratulate
our five outstanding finalists:
Out of Eden: An
Odyssey of Ecological Invasion
by Alan Burdick published by Farrar, Straus
& Giroux.
Jean-Jacques Rousseau: Restless Genius
by Leo Damrosch, published by Houghton Mifflin.
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Jeanne
Birdsall and Joan Didion
Photo credit: Robin Platzer/Twin Images |
The Year of Magical Thinking by Joan Didion,
published by Knopf.
102 Minutes: The Untold Story of the Fight
to Survive Inside the Twin Towers by Jim
Dwyer and Kevin Flynn, published by Times Books.
Bury the Chains: Prophets and Rebels in the
Fight to Free an Empire’s Slaves by
Adam Hochschild, published by Houghton Mifflin.
This
year’s National Book Award in Nonfiction
goes to The Year of Magical Thinking
by Joan Didion.
JOAN DIDION:
There is hardly anything I can say about this
except thank you, and thank you to everybody
at Knopf who accepted my idea that I could sit
down and write a book about something that was
not exactly anything but personal and that it
would work. Thank you all. [Applause]
From the Publisher
A stunning book of
electric honesty and passion. Joan Didion explores
an intensely personal yet universal experience:
a portrait of a marriage and the life that surrounds
it, in good times and bad.
Joan Didion
was born in California and lives in
New York City. She is the author of five novels
and seven previous books of nonfiction. Joan
Didion’s Where I Was From, Political
Fictions, The Last Thing He Wanted, After Henry,
Miami, Democracy, Salvador, A Book of Common
Prayer, and Run River. Her book,
The White Album, was a Finalist for
the National Book Award in 1981.
Judges' Citation
The Year of Magical Thinking
is a masterpiece in two genres: memoir and investigative
journalism. The subject of the memoir is the year after
the sudden death of the writer's husband. The target
of the investigation, though, is the nature of folly
and time. The writer attends to details, assembles a
chronology, and asks hard questions of the witnesses,
most notably herself. But she imagines that the story
she tells can be revised, the world righted, her husband
returned, alive. What she offers is an unflinching journey
into intimacy and grief.
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