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PULITZER PRIZES of the 1970s |
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1970 Winner |
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1971 Winner |
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ANGLE
OF REPOSE 1972 Winner Wallace
Stegner's Pulitzer Prize-winning novel is a story of discovery—personal,
historical, and geographical. Confined to a wheelchair, retired historian Lyman
Ward sets out to write his grandparents' remarkable story, chronicling their
days spent carving civilization into the surface of America's western frontier.
But his research reveals even more about his own life than he's willing to
admit. What emerges is an enthralling portrait of four generations in the life
of an American family. |
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| The Optimist's
Daughter Eudora Welty 1973 Winner The
Optimist's Daughter is a
compact and inward-looking little novel, a Pulitzer Prize winner that's slight
of page yet big of heart. The optimist in question is 71-year-old Judge McKelva,
who has come to a New Orleans hospital from Mount Salus, Mississippi,
complaining of a "disturbance" in his vision. To his daughter, Laurel,
it's as rare for him to admit "self-concern" as it is for him to be
sick, and she immediately flies down from Chicago to be by his side. The
subsequent operation on the judge's eye goes well, but the recovery does not. He
lies still with both eyes heavily bandaged, growing ever more passive until
finally--with some help from the shockingly vulgar Fay, his wife of two
years--he simply dies. Together Fay and Laurel travel to Mount Salus to bury
him, and the novel begins the inward spiral that leads Laurel to the moment when
"all she had found had found her," when the "deepest spring in
her heart had uncovered itself" and begins to flow again. |
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| 1974 Winner | |
| 1975 Winner | |
| HUMBOLDT’S GIFT Saul Bellow 1976 Winner Novel by Saul Bellow, published in 1975. The novel, which won the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1976, is a self-described "comic book about death," whose title character is modeled on the self-destructive lyric poet Delmore Schwartz. Charlie Citrine, an intellectual, middle-aged author of award-winning biographies and plays, contemplates two significant figures and philosophies in his life: Von Humboldt Fleisher, a dead poet who had been his mentor, and Rinaldo Cantabile, a very-much-alive minor mafioso who has been the bane of Humboldt's existence. Humboldt had taught Charlie that art is powerful and that one should be true to one's creative spirit. Rinaldo, Charlie's self-appointed financial adviser, has always urged Charlie to use his art to turn a profit. At the novel's end, Charlie has managed to set his own course |
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| 1977 Winner | |
| 1978 Winner | |
| 1979 Winner | |
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