Oprah
Winfrey
50th ANNIVERSARY GOLD MEDAL RECIPIENT
Presented at the 1999 National Book Awards
Oprah Winfrey with Yolanda
Moses at the 1999 National Book Awards. All Photos:
Robin Platzer |
Thank you Neil,
and thank you to the National Book Foundation. More than
movie stars, and rock stars, and famous politicians, and
world leaders, and powerhouse rich muckety mucks, and
lah-de-das, I love authors. I just, I love authors. I
love authors because in the beginning was the word. The
word with the power to sustain us, and fill us, and make
us whole. For all of you here tonight, who wrestle with
the word, who are bound to and liberated by the word,
God bless you. I may appear to be cool, but I really am
just plain giddy being in your presence, and being allowed
to stand here before you to receive this award.
The very idea -
let me just share with you for a moment - of creating
a book club on television, came to me by way of my senior
producer, Alice McGee, who's seated at that table there,
and producer Laura Sillars, and the entire Book Club team:
Heather Short, and Jill Adams, Gregg Sherkin, please stand,
because without them this never would have happened. Our
executive producer, Diane Hudson, please stand, who said,
"Go ahead, do it. Go ahead."
So, this is how it all started.
Alice McGee and Laura came into my office one day, and
said, "You know, the book club is really popular,
and we know how much you love books. Perhaps maybe you
would like to start a book club on television." Now,
Alice and I had been book buddies for a long time, exchanging
books since The Color Purple. Every year for Christmas,
Alice gives me a leather bound copy of whatever was our
favorite read that year. When she and Laura first came
to me with the idea, however, of doing a book club on
television, needless to say, it didn't go over very well.
I think I said something like, "get out of my office
now." Because we tried it before, because we all
love books. And we tried to talk about fiction on television,
and it just did dismally in the ratings, because no one
else had read the book. So, they persisted with bait that
they knew would hook me in. They came back a week later,
and said, we know how much you love authors, how you get
excited just knowing you can find their numbers. Two years
before, Alice and I had shared this experience, because
on the back of the book jackets, if the author isn't very
well-known, it lists where they live. So, Alice and I
had called up Wally Lamb at home, after reading She's
Come Undone, just to discuss Dolores, and how he could
write about a woman so profoundly. And so, we call Wally
at home, and found that Wally was doing his laundry. And
we couldn't believe it. We hung up the phone and went,
"authors do laundry." Can't believe it.
Winfrey with the 1999
National Book Award Winners. L to R: John Dower
(Nonfiction); Kimberly Willis Holt (Young People's
Literature); Winfrey; Ai (Poetry); Ha Jin (Fiction).
Photo by Robin Platzer. |
So, we later learned that,
once they become more successful, they are not listed. Years
before I had made a similar call, 1989, to Toni Morrison.
She was, of course, unlisted. And I had to call the fire
department in her town, claiming an emergency to get her
number. I just wanted to talk to her about Beloved.
I'd finished reading it, and asked her. I said, "Ms.
Morrison, does anyone ever tell you that sometimes they
have to go over the sentences several times, to get the
full meaning of what you're really saying?" And she
said, "that, my dear, is called reading." Oh my.
I admire, respect, and adore
authors. My reading of I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings,
when I was a teenager, was my first recollection of being
validated. The fact that someone as poor as I, as Black
as I, from the South, from rape, from confusion, could
move to hope, to possibility, and to victory, could be
written about in a real book that I had chosen in the
library was amazing to me. Authors could do that, with
the word.
So, when Alice and Laura came
again, and said, we have an idea - every month, you can
sit, and you can talk to the author as long as you'd like,
and we could even do it over dinner. I thought, authors
and dinner, oh my.
Thank you, Neil, for this honor.
I thank the National Book Foundation. It's a charge and
a thrill to be acknowledged, as well as a confirmation
that doing what you love, and sharing what you love, can
bring this much reward. Books allowed me to see that there
was a world beyond Mississippi, beyond poverty, beyond
Nashville, beyond Milwaukee. Books allowed me a new way
of seeing myself, helped me to create a vision that has
exceeded even my grandest dreams. Opened the door to experiences
and connections I never knew existed. Books helped me
to know, what Maya often says, that we really are more
alike than we are different. The real blessing for us
all at the book club is now being able to open that door
for somebody else.
This is how it works. It's not
really very complicated. I choose the books that I truly
love. The main criterion is that I have to like it a lot.
Sometimes the books are offered to me by one person. Now
we have a whole team who reads them. And sometimes I just
find them browsing in the bookstores. This past Sunday,
I was at Barnes and Noble, bought $688 worth of new fiction,
with my corporate discount.
So, the main criteria is that
I have to respond to it, and I have ultimate veto power
even if they all like it. And the author has to be alive
to talk about it. We cannot open that dead author door,
because it's just too wide. Recently Alice came to me
and said she had a book that she wanted me to read. And
I said, is the author alive? And she said, well, she only
died recently. No way.
We have to be taken in by it.
Every month, we are just as overwhelmed as the authors
and publishers are at how the books are received. Maybe
not the publishers. But, since our only profit really
is that we are exposing more people to the word, that
is our great delight. Here is some of what I wanted to
share with you, what that has wrought. We get thousands
of letters and emails. Noel Gardener from Morrisville,
Pennsylvania said, "I'm so angry with you, Oprah.
I've spent my time since you've started your book club
as a crazy person. These books have consumed me. Since
your book club has started, I've become a real reader.
I think that I realize that what reading should be about,
apart from being an escape, is making you think, examine,
pull apart, and rethink. And maybe, after rethinking,
I'm not so angry with you. Maybe I'm just saying thank
you for showing me a way to find out who I can really
be, who I really am, and what I can really do if I put
my mind to it."
Winfrey with Toni Morrison. |
Another one says, "My
ten-year-old son wanted me," this is Evelyn in North
Augusta, South Carolina. "My ten-year-old son wanted
me to read Paradise, after hearing you talk about
it on your show. Of course I ignored him at first. But everyday
when he came home from school, he would say, mom, did you
read that book Miss Oprah said? Finally, I purchased the
book, and started reading the first chapter. I was lost"
-that my dear is called reading, "But I remember you
saying it would get clearer as I got further along. Well,
guess what. I could not put the book down. And every day
I found myself looking forward to my private getaway with
my book. Reading this book has helped me to forget about
my own problems. Thanks for opening a new door for me."
And thousands of others. But
my very favorite was a woman who stood up in the audience,
not too long ago. I forgot what the show was. We were
doing a commercial break, and she stood up and said, "Oprah,
hi. My name is Wilma, Wilma Gardener. I'm from Gary, Indiana.
I'm a president of the Gary improvement association, and
I'm president of my bowling league. I say all that not
to brag. Just to let you know, I'm a very intelligent
woman. But I haven't read a book in over 30 years. So,
I was so happy you started that book club. I'm a member,
you know, of your book club. I get the books when you
say get the books, only I don't get the books you say
get. No, I don't really like the books you recommend.
But I do like Patti LaBelle, and I got that book, Don't
Block the Blessings. I just love that book. And then
I bought that Michael Jackson book. He didn't have much
to say. But I'm waiting on you to announce when the time
is for us to get the next book, because I'm going to buy
the Aretha Franklin book. I just want you to know, I'm
proud to me a member of your book club."
Thank you very much.