Namwali Serpell & Wayétu Moore Up for 2020 National Book Critics Circle Awards

. . . for the essay collection Stranger Faces and the memoir The Dragons, The Giant, The Women, respectively.
Namwali Serpell by Peg Skorpinski.

Namwali Serpell by Peg Skorpinski.

Namwali Serpell & Wayétu Moore Up for 2020 National Book Critics Circle Awards

The US National Book Critics Circle (NBCC) has announced the finalists for the 2020 NBCC Awards. The Zambian writer Namwali Serpell is shortlisted in the Criticism category for Stranger Faces, her collection of speculative essays exploring the face—the disabled face, the digital face, the strange face. The Liberian-American writer Wayétu Moore is in the Autobiography category for The Dragons, The Giant, The Women, a memoir based on her difficult childhood and her life as a Black woman and immigrant.

Presented for the first time in 1976, the NBCC Awards recognise the finest literary books published in the English language in the US. They were originally presented in six categories: Autobiography, Biography, Criticism, Fiction, Nonfiction, and Poetry. In 2014, the John Leonard Award was created for debut books.

Namwali Serpell’s Stranger Faces. Credit: Monica Reader in Emerald City on Facebook.

Namwali Serpell’s debut novel The Old Drift (2019) won the Arthur C. Clarke Award and the Anisfield-Wolf Book Award. She later received a 2020 Windham–Campbell.

She won the Caine Prize in 2015 for her short story “The Sack.”

Wayétu Moore’s debut novel She Would Be King (2018) was named a Best Book of 2018 by Publishers Weekly, Booklist, Entertainment Weekly, and BuzzFeed. She received the 2019 Lannan Literary Fellowship for Fiction.

The Nigerian novelist Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie won the NBCC fiction award in 2014 for Americanah. In 2011, the Nigerian writer Teju Cole was a finalist in the fiction category for Open City. In 2012, the Kenyan writer Ngugi wa Thiong’o was a finalist in the autobiography category for In the House of the Interpreter.

We congratulate Wayétu Moore and Namwali Serpell.

Visit here for the full list of finalists.

The NBCC Awards Ceremony will be held on 25 March 2021.

...

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Recommendation

At 91, the Catholic prelate is the most accomplished living African and Black religious minister, our oldest cover star, and our first outside literature and film.
There is no literary bookstore in Africa’s oldest modern country. But, after civil wars and an epidemic, its writers are writing, and hoping.
Created by the Nigerian artists Vetum Galadima and Amaka Obioma, with sponsorship by Africa No Filter, it “combines museum technology and art direction to create a perspective for art preservation.”

“An ambitious new magazine committed to African literature”

— Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie

Join 18,000+ subscribers to essential, in-depth stories in African literature & Nigerian film: inspiring Profiles, incisive reviews, thought-provoking features and conversations. It's premium access to the visions of changemakers, from industry leaders to emerging voices. Plus key stories from Folio Nigeria by CNN.

We respect your privacy and will never send you Spam or sell your email.

Search

Top