The 88th Annual Anisfield-Wolf Book Awards is an original one-hour special hosted by Dr. Henry Louis Gates Jr., popular public television personality and Anisfield-Wolf Book Awards jury chair. The program features visits to the hometowns of the 2023 honorees – former reporter Geraldine Brooks, novelist Lan Samantha Chang, poet Saeed Jones, historian Matthew F. Delmont and civil rights icon Charlayne Hunter-Gault.
The Anisfield-Wolf Book Awards was created in 1935 by Cleveland, Ohio, native Edith Anisfield Wolf to honor and celebrate literary greats who dedicate their craft to combatting racism, celebrating diversity and demanding equality.
Past winners include Ralph Ellison, Toni Morrison and Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie. It is the only American book prize focusing on works that address racism and diversity.
“Horse” by Geraldine Brooks
Fiction
“You have to know that bigots are unwittingly handing you an edge. By thinking you’re lesser than they are, they underestimate you. Lean on that. Learn to use it, and you’ll get the upper hand.”
Geraldine Brooks, award-winning war correspondent and Pulitzer-winning novelist, upended her life 16 years ago when she took a trail ride and found herself horse-smitten.
When a horse of her own arrived at her Martha’s Vineyard home, her writing stalled. But a chance conversation over lunch provided Brooks a way to wed her equine mania with her penchant for writing bestselling historical fiction.
“The Family Chao” by Lan Samantha Chang
Fiction
“What Chinese identity?” Ming shouts. To his horror, she looks, again, like a little girl. He sees her at six years old, standing on the playground, watching the sun shine on the blond hair of her classmates. He can’t stand it. Even though he’s been there, is familiar with the origins of self-hatred, knows he can’t bear it because it reminds him of himself, he can’t speak to her any more. He puts his headphones on and turns up the sound.”
It took author Lan Samantha Chang a dozen years to compose “The Family Chao” amid her responsibilities directing the Iowa Writers’ Workshop, mentoring and teaching.
Anisfield-Wolf Book Awards juror Joyce Carol Oates called the novel “an outstanding work of fiction,” saying she had read nothing else of late as ambitious or accomplished.
Lan Samantha Chang at the Anisfield-Wolf Book Awards ceremony on Sept. 28, 2023. [The Dark Room Co.]
Lan Samantha Chang at the Anisfield-Wolf Book Awards ceremony on Sept. 28, 2023. [The Dark Room Co.]
Lan Samantha Chang is the director of the Iowa Writers' Workshop at the University of Iowa. [Natalia Garcia / Ideastream Public Media]
Lan Samantha Chang is the director of the Iowa Writers' Workshop at the University of Iowa. [Natalia Garcia / Ideastream Public Media]
Lan Samantha Chang reads from her book, “The Family Chao,” during Book Week on Sept. 29, 2023. [Kamron Khan]
Lan Samantha Chang reads from her book, “The Family Chao,” during Book Week on Sept. 29, 2023. [Kamron Khan]
“Alive at the End of the World” by Saeed Jones
Poetry
“Alive at the End of the World” is Saeed Jones’ second collection, containing 46 poems.
Anisfield-Wolf juror Rita Dove called the book “an aching reminder that a queer Black man leads a meta existence; he cannot live without thinking about living, constantly negotiating the everyday with an eye to the peril that can intrude at any time, from police violence to the minutest reactions from highbrow bigots.”
The end of the world was mistaken
for just another midday massacre
in America. Brain matter and broken
glass, blurred boot prints in pools
of blood. We dialed the newly dead
but they wouldn’t answer. We texted,
begging them to call us back, but
the newly dead don’t know how to
read. In America, a gathering of people
is called target practice or a funeral,
depending on who lives long enough
to define the terms. But for now, we
are alive at the end of the world
“Alive at the End of the World” by Saeed Jones
Saeed Jones grew up in the American South, lived much of his adult life in New York and now lives in Columbus, Ohio. [Natalia Garcia / Ideastream Public Media]
Saeed Jones grew up in the American South, lived much of his adult life in New York and now lives in Columbus, Ohio. [Natalia Garcia / Ideastream Public Media]
“Half American” by Matthew F. Delmont
Non-Fiction
In his book “Half American: The Epic Story of African Americans Fighting World War II at Home and Abroad,” Matthew F. Delmont reveals, “the war really started for most Black Americans before Pearl Harbor. Fascism in Europe is something that Blacks understood as white supremacism.”
Anisfield-Wolf Juror Steven Pinker praised the book saying it, “rewrites our understanding of ‘the greatest generation’ in the ‘good war,’ given the shocking discrimination and harassment of millions of patriots willing to risk their lives in it.”
"Stories that ignore the intense battles Black Americans fought against racism and Jim Crow segregation on the home front make it appear that World War II was a simpler and more unified time in America, when in reality it was anything but."
U.S. Army nurses, newly arrived, line the rail of their vessel as it pulls into port of Greenock, Scotland. [National Archives]
U.S. Army nurses, newly arrived, line the rail of their vessel as it pulls into port of Greenock, Scotland. [National Archives]
World War II veteran and historic Cleveland architect Robert P. Madison. [Robert P. Madison]
World War II veteran and historic Cleveland architect Robert P. Madison. [Robert P. Madison]
Matthew F. Delmont speaking at East Tech High School in Cleveland, Ohio, on Sept. 30, 2023. [Kamron Khan]
Matthew F. Delmont speaking at East Tech High School in Cleveland, Ohio, on Sept. 30, 2023. [Kamron Khan]
Charlayne Hunter-Gault
Lifetime Achievement
Charlayne Hunter-Gault was just a teenager in 1961 when she desegregated the all-white University of Georgia. She was met with violence, rioting, vandalism and taunts.
In her bio, Hunter-Gault defines herself as a journalist, author and lecturer. But the wider world considers her a civil rights icon, recalling that she persevered, even when her clothes were covered with glass shards, splintered from a brick thrown through her dormitory window during two nights of rioting and tear gas over her temerity for being there.
“While the challenges keep on coming, Black history teaches us that the civil rights movement’s anthem of keep on keepin’ on yields positive results.”