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Whiting Winners Are Chosen

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  • Whiting Winners Are Chosen

    WHITING WINNERS ARE CHOSEN
    By Julie Bosman

    New York Times
    Oct 26 2006

    Five fiction writers, three poets and two playwrights have been
    awarded $40,000 each as the winners of the annual Whiting Writers'
    Awards for emerging authors.

    The awards, which were presented last night at a ceremony in New York,
    are given to writers early in their careers who possess exceptional
    talent and promise. Past winners have included Jonathan Franzen,
    Colson Whitehead, Jorie Graham and Sarah Ruhl.

    A long list of prospective winners is selected by an anonymous group
    of literary professionals; then a smaller committee of writers,
    scholars and editors selects the 10 winners. The Mrs. Giles Whiting
    Foundation has given the awards since 1985.

    This year, the foundation chose winners from what it said was an
    unusually diverse set of backgrounds, whose writing is "reflective of
    their heritage and different sensibilities." Among them are a Navajo
    poet, the daughter of an immigrant farm worker, an Armenian-American
    novelist, a Chinese-born novelist, a Korean-American poet and the
    son of an Irish dairy farmer.

    The fiction winners were Charles D'Ambrosio, who is the author of
    "The Dead Fish Museum," a short story collection published in April by
    Alfred A. Knopf; Yiyun Li, a native of China whose collection of short
    stories, "A Thousand Years of Good Prayers," was published by Random
    House last year; Micheline Aharonian Marcom, who was born in Saudi
    Arabia and now teaches at Mills College in Oakland, Calif., and whose
    most recent novel is "The Daydreaming Boy," published by Riverhead;
    Patrick O'Keeffe, who was born in Ireland, and is the author of "The
    Hill Road," a collection of stories published by Viking last year;
    and Nina Marie Martínez, the daughter of a Mexican-American farm
    worker, and the author of a novel, "¡Caramba!"

    from Knopf.

    The winners for poetry were Sherwin Bitsui, who grew up in White Cone,
    Ariz., on a Navajo reservation and is the author of "Shapeshift,"
    a collection of poems from the University of Arizona Press; Tyehimba
    Jess, whose first book, "Leadbelly" was published last year by Verse
    Press; and Suji Kwock Kim, the author of "Notes >>From the Divided
    Country: Poems," from Louisiana State University Press.

    The playwrights honored by the Whiting Foundation are both residents of
    New York: Bruce Norris, the author of the play "The Pain and the Itch,"
    which just concluded a run at Playwrights Horizons, and Stephen Adly
    Guirgis, an actor and playwright whose "Last Days of Judas Iscariot"
    and "Our Lady of 121st Street" were among several plays presented by
    the LAByrinth Theater Company, of which he is a member.

    --Boundary_(ID_e64FcBwfvXnZuZC4tvKqOg)--
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