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Book Awards by Year

Book Awards by Years Awarded

Subscribe to the lovethebook.com book feed mix using any reader! 6/25/2010
Writer, critic and activist Carlos Monsiváis, 1938 - 2010
6/8/2010
He is totally unreproducible — he was sui generis — Martin Gardner, 1914 - 2010
4/6/2010
Anarchist, poet, publisher and chess-player, John Rety, 1930 - 2010
4/4/2010
"Literature was another victim of the war": Miguel Delibes, 1920 - 2010
3/7/2010
Translator, critic and BBC script editor, Barbara Bray, 1924 - 2010
1/30/2010
Tributes to People's Historian Howard Zinn, 1922 - 2010
1/2/2010
At 42, she was one of the best poets of her generation, Rachel Wetzsteon, 1967 - 2009
12/27/2009
You have to decide which side you are on: there is always a side. Commitment does not exist in an abstraction; it exists in action: Dennis Brutus, 1924 - 2009
11/8/2009
Claude Lévi-Strauss, 1908 - 2009, his works as a practical anti-racist manifesto
11/7/2009
Power exercised by man over his fellow man is always a usurpation, Francisco Ayala, 1906 - 2009
10/14/2009
The Potato that Became a Tomato, Playgiarist Raymond Federman, 1928 - 2009
9/30/2009
Milton Meltzer, 1915 – 2009
9/14/2009
Iconic poet and punk rocker, Jim Carroll, 1950 - 2009
8/9/2009
Israeli writer Amos Kenan, 1927 - 2009
7/30/2009
Angela's Ashes author Frank McCourt, 1930 - 2009
6/23/2009
Indian poet Kamal Das, 1934 - 2009
6/8/2009
Ethnic Studies Pioneer Ronald Takaki, 1939 - 2009
3/29/2009
Pioneer Historian and Scholar of African-American studies, John Hope Franklin, 1915 - 2009
2/20/2009
Sudan novelist Tayeb Salih, 1929 -2009
1/31/2009
John Updike, 1932 - 2009, David Margolick on John Updike's Adieu to Ted Williams
1/22/2009
Norwegian philosopher and founder of the Deep Ecology Movement, Arne Næss, 1912 – 2009
1/4/2009
English poet, novelist, playwright, socialist and pacifist, Adrian Mitchell, 1932 - 2008
12/28/2008
Art, Truth and Politics - Harold Pinter, 1930 - 2008
12/19/2008
Dorothy Porter, 1954 - 2008
11/17/2008
Jazz biographer Peter Levinson, 1934-2008
11/10/2008
'My epitaph will be 'Curiosity did not kill this cat'' – Studs Terkel, 1912 - 2008
9/15/2008
I think it's the best time to be alive ever and it's probably the best time to be a writer - David Foster Wallace, 1962-2008
8/15/2008
Mahmoud Darwish, 1942 - 2008
6/17/2008
Media Guru Tony Schwartz, 1923 - 2008
5/25/2008
David Rieff on a lying to his dying mother, Susan Sontag
5/18/2008
Swing Hammer Swing! author, Jeff Torrington, 1935-2008
3/25/2008
Arthur C. Clarke, 1917 - 2008
1/22/2008
Poet and translator or Icelandic literature, Bernard Scudder, 1955 – 2007
1/13/2008
George MacDonald Fraser, inventor of Flashman, 1925 – 2008
12/30/2007
Julien Gracq, 1910 - 2007
12/20/2007
Diane Middlebrook, 1939 - 2007
12/16/2007
Gay historian Allan Bérubé dies
12/2/2007
One of the greatest scientists of our era, Seymour Benzer, dies at age 86
11/21/2007
Vernon Scannell, 1922 - 2007
11/14/2007
Norman Mailer, 1923-2007. He went down swinging.
11/6/2007
James Michie 1927 - 2007
9/19/2007
Champion of science fiction for children, Douglas Hill, 1935 - 2007
9/8/2007
Newberry Medal winner Madeleine L'Engle dies
9/2/2007
Julia Briggs, 1943 - 2007
8/30/2007
American short-story writer and activist Grace Paley dies
8/26/2007
Once the Nuremberg Trials were over and a few people judged guilty, no one wanted to talk about it. But I was driven by a desire to know what happened. - Raul Hilberg 1926 - 2007
8/5/2007
Ingmar Bergman 1918 - 2007
6/11/2007
Poet and translator Michael Hamburger, 1924 - 2007
6/3/2007
Classical scholar and archaeologist, Christiane Sourvinou-Inwood, dies at 62
5/16/2007
Dickens scholar Philip Collins, 1923 - 2007
1/2/2010 At 42, she was one of the best poets of her generation, Rachel Wetzsteon, 1967 - 2009

"At 42, she was one of the best poets of her generation", writes Adam Kirsch in memory and admiration of Rachel Wetzsteon who took her own life on Christmas day, 2009. "In a perfect world", Kirsch wrote earlier, "Rachel Wetzsteon would be one of the most popular poets of her generation. You would see people in the outdoor cafes along Upper Broadway reading copies of Sakura Park, her third collection, the way pilgrims to Greenwich Village carry Scott Fitzgerald or Edna St. Vincent Millay...Wetzsteon’s poems are odes to sharpened senses, to possibilities held open, and to the city whose own sharp openness seems like a standing invitation" (Adam Kirsch, from a Contemporary Poetry Review of Sakura Park by Rachel Wetzsteon).

Gold Leaves

Someone ought to write about (I thought
and therefore do) stage three of alchemy:
not inauspicious metal turned into
a gilded page, but that same page turned back
to basics when you step outside for air
and feel a radiance that was not there
the day before, your sidewalks lined with gold.


Five-Finger Exercise

When things get hot and heavy this weekend or one August
twenty years from now, and I start tapping hexameters
up and down the shoulder-blades of my beloved (insert
auspicious, trustworthy-sounding, stolid but fun name here
for I can conjure none), I hope I do it right,
never losing sight of the skin whose golden toughness
allows the counting, never moving my fingers so briskly
that I can't hear his breathing, and never forgetting, even
in the lonely heights of sublimest inspiration—
What is your substance?... O rose ... and grey and full of sleep—
to flip the warm flesh over and whisper, It had to be you.

- two poems by Rachel Wetzsteon published in The Corland Review.


Sakura Park: Poems
Rachel Wetzsteon
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Home and Away
Rachel Wetzsteon
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Influential Ghosts
Rachel Wetzsteon
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