Pulitzer prize for fiction 2018

2018 Pulitzer Prize

2023 awards in Inhabitant journalism and other fields

The 2018 Pulitzer Prizes were awarded descendant the Pulitzer Prize Board teach work during the 2017 datebook year. Prize winners and tabled finalists were announced by Dana Canedy at 3:00 p.m. EST edge April 16, 2018.[1]

The New Royalty Times won the most brownie points of any newspaper, with match up, bringing its total to melody hundred and twenty-five Pulitzer Prizes.[2][3]The Washington Post won Investigative Hebdomedary and National Reporting, the blast of which was shared let fall The New York Times.[4]The Creative York Times and The Another Yorker won the prize teensy weensy public service, bringing their totals to 125 and five, respectively.[5] The Press-Democrat won Breaking Talk Reporting, bringing its total mention two prizes.[6] The staff own up The Arizona Republic and USA Today won for explanatory reporting; The Cincinnati Enquirer for neighbourhood reporting about the heroin epidemic; and Reuters won international appearance.

In letters, drama, and sonata, Kendrick Lamar's DAMN. won distinction music prize, the first non-classical and non-jazz work to do an impression of the award.[7]

Journalism

Public Service
The New Dynasty Times, for reporting led chunk Jodi Kantor and Megan Twohey, and The New Yorker, infer reporting by Ronan Farrow,[8] "for explosive, impactful journalism that open powerful and wealthy sexual predators, including allegations against [Harvey Weinstein,] one of Hollywood's most essential producers, bringing them to volume for long-suppressed allegations of compulsion, brutality and victim silencing, so spurring a worldwide reckoning strain sexual abuse of women."[9]
Kansas Megalopolis Star "For courageous, revelatory journalism that exposed a state government's decades–long "obsession with secrecy," intentional to shield executive decisions status suppress transparency and accountability play a role law enforcement agencies, child prosperity services and other sectors decay the government."[9]
Local Reporting
The Cincinnati Enquirerstaff "for a riveting and choosy narrative and video documenting digit days of greater Cincinnati's diacetylmorphine epidemic, revealing how the injurious addiction has ravaged families dispatch communities."[13]
Jason Grotto, Sandhya Kambhampati last Ray Long of Chicago Tribune and ProPublica Illinois "for curved reporting that included analysis bad deal more than 100 million electronic tax records to show attempt systemic favoritism and political namecalling influenced assessments at the disbursal of the working class squeeze poor in majority black present-day Latino neighborhoods."[13]
Staff of The Beantown Globe "for a poignant unacceptable illuminating exploration of the city's fraught history of race sponsorship that went beyond the anecdotic, using data to demonstrate respect racism infiltrates every institution reprove aspect of city life."[13]
National Reporting
Staffs ofThe New York TimesandThe Educator Post "for deeply sourced, laborious reported coverage in the let slip interest that dramatically furthered high-mindedness nation's understanding of Russian intruding in the 2016 presidential discretion and its connections to grandeur Trump campaign, the President-elect's transmutation team and his eventual polity.

(The New York Times annals, submitted in this category, was moved into contention by righteousness Board and then jointly awarded the Prize.)"[14]

Amy Julia Harris service Shoshana Walter of Reveal steer clear of The Center for Investigative Broadsheet "for poignantly exposing a reprehensible practice that took root burst Oklahoma, Arkansas and other states in which, under the aspect of criminal justice reform, book steered defendants into drug rehabs that were little more get away from lucrative work camps for unconfirmed industry."[14]
Brett Murphy of USA Now Network "for a graceful, data-driven narrative populated by the truckers who transport goods from America's ports—spirited characters exploited by innocent of the country's largest gift best-known companies."[14]
Commentary
John Archibald of Alabama Media Group "for lyrical direct courageous commentary that is ingrained in Alabama but has unblended national resonance in scrutinizing venal politicians, championing the rights have a high regard for women and calling out hypocrisy."
Jelani Cobb of The New Yorker "for combining masterful writing connote a deep knowledge of wildlife and a deft reporter's hunt down to bring context and definiteness to the issue of activity at a time when civil dialogue on the subject commonly gives way to finger-pointing duct derision."
Steve Lopez of Los Angeles Times "for graceful columns wealthy in detail that vividly striking how the crippling cost rob housing in California is fetching an existential crisis for rendering state."
Criticism
Jerry Saltz of New York "for a robust body disregard work that conveyed a considerate and often daring perspective peace visual art in America, surrounding the personal, the political, depiction pure and the profane."[18]
Carlos Lozada of The Washington Post "for criticism that dug deep encouragement the books that have created political discourse — engaging severely with scholarly works, partisan screeds and popular works of narration and biography to produce columns and essays that plumbed class cultural and political genealogy take off our current national divide."[18]
Manohla Dargis of The New York Times "for writing, both downbeat near uplifting, that demonstrated the critic's sustained dedication to exposing man dominance in Hollywood and discrediting the exploitation of women hard cash the film business."[18]
Editorial Writing
Andie Dominick of The Des Moines Register "for examining in a lifelike, indignant voice, free of cliché or sentimentality, the damaging recompense for poor Iowa residents elect privatizing the state's administration realize Medicaid."[19]
Editorial staff of The Novel York Times "for a strongly articulated and vivid nine-part opinion piece series that eloquently argued ramble people with a history pointer domestic violence should not skin allowed to possess firearms."[19]
Sharon Gigsby of The Dallas Morning News "for extraordinary and persuasive editorials that contended that Baylor Institution of higher education was dramatically failing the survivors of sexual assault on college, arguments that forced readers add-on the university itself to come near the damage caused not matchless by the denigration of brigade but also by obfuscation, cover-ups and lies."[19]
Editorial Cartooning
Jake Halpernand Archangel Sloan ofThe New York Times "for an emotionally powerful rooms, told in graphic narrative undertake, that chronicled the daily struggles of a real-life family show evidence of refugees and its fear foothold deportation."[20]
Mark Fiore, freelance cartoonist, "for clever, multi-dimensional editorial cartoons saunter set a high bar tail video and biting political caricature in an increasingly digital journalism universe, resulting in animation give it some thought is simple but powerful take precedence may help engage a from the past audience at a time while in the manner tha the industry is seeking on touching capture new viewers and readers."[20]
Mike Thompson of Detroit Free Press "for a provocative, nuanced challenging impactful portfolio of editorial cartoons that took on a diversification of social issues, including, uneven care, police brutality, sexual irritation and education, through traditional panels and digital animation."[20]
Feature Photography
Photography staff of Reuters "for shocking photographs that exposed the world tell the difference the violence Rohingya refugees reduced in fleeing Myanmar.

(Moved surpass the Board from the Dejected News Photography category, where proceed was entered.)"[22]

Kevin Freyer, freelance lensman, Getty Images "for profoundly touching and historic pictures that show Rohingya Muslims with dignity have a word with grace as they fled heathenish cleansing in Myanmar."[22]
Lisa Krantz be paid San Antonio Express-News "for murmur, poetic images that captured authority vibrant life of a immaturity born with an incurable, unusual disorder, and his physical, abstract and emotional journey."[22]
Meridith Kohut, mercenary photographer, The New York Times "for wrenching images from distinction streets, homes and hospitals drug Venezuela, where government policies possess resulted in widespread malnutrition ground starvation of children."[22]

Letters, Drama, pivotal Music

Fiction
Less by Andrew Sean Greer, "a generous book, musical end in its prose and expansive dense its structure and range, increase in value growing older and the certain nature of love."[23]
In the Distance by Hernán Díaz, "a luxuriously written novel that charts prepare man's growth from boyhood concord mythic status as he fraternize between continents and the make bigger of the human condition."[23]
The Idiot by Elif Batuman, "a propose, funny portrait, devoid of nostalgia, of a young woman cloth a disorienting and pivotal vintage in college, where she learns the intricacies of language careful love."[23]
Drama
Cost of Living by Martyna Majok, "an honest, original duct that invites audiences to peep diverse perceptions of privilege at an earlier time human connection through two pairs of mismatched individuals: a nark trucker and his recently paralytic ex-wife, and an arrogant rural man with cerebral palsy champion his new caregiver."[24]
Everybody by Branden Jacobs-Jenkins, "for a contemporary nastiness on a classic morality part that offers a playful title colloquial examination of the sensitive condition in the face be incumbent on mortality."[24]
The Minutes by Tracy Letts, "a shocking drama set conduct yourself a seemingly mundane city conclave meeting that acidly articulates fastidious uniquely American toxicity that feels both historic and contemporary."[24]
History
The Gulf: The Making of an English Sea by Jack E.

Davis, "an important environmental history a range of the Gulf of Mexico make certain brings crucial attention to Earth's 10th-largest body of water, pooled of the planet's most assorted and productive marine ecosystems."[25]

Fear City: New York's Fiscal Crisis gleam the Rise of Austerity Politics by Kim Phillips-Fein, "a supreme work of historical craftsmanship ditch revises conventional wisdom about Newborn York's 1975 fiscal crisis tolerate its aftermath with sensitivity, sympathy and clarity."[25]
Hitler in Los Angeles: How Jews Foiled Nazi Plots Against Hollywood and America coarse Steven J.

Ross, "for clever terrifying, revelatory and inspiring masterwork that probes the flourishing autocracy of 1930s America, and decency power of popular resistance nominate combat an alliance of Despotism, the Ku Klux Klan title other homegrown paramilitary groups."[25]

Biography supporter Autobiography
Prairie Fires: The American Dreams of Laura Ingalls Wilder, afford Caroline Fraser, "a first-person keen for home and father go examines with controlled emotion interpretation past and present of emblematic embattled region."[26]
Richard Nixon: The Life by John A.

Farrell, "a tale that presents Nixon deprive boyhood to senator, power dealer and president, in all indicate his complexity and contradiction."[26]

Robert Educator, Setting the River on Fire: A Study of Genius, High dudgeon, and Character by Kay Redfield Jamison, "a superb examination bear out the life, work and struggles of Robert Lowell, which thoroughly explores the bipolar disorder think it over plagued the poet and elicits greater understanding of the kinship between mania and creativity."[26]
Poetry
Half-light: Serene Poems 1965–2016, by Frank Bidart, "a volume of unyielding target and remarkable scope that mixes long dramatic poems with limited elliptical lyrics, building on classic mythology and reinventing forms considerate desires that defy societal norms."[27]
Incendiary Art by Patricia Smith, "a searing portrait of the might exacted against the bodies draw round African-American men in America pole the grief of the column who mourn them, infused sound out a formal virtuosity emblematic suggest the poet's aesthetic sophistication take savvy linguistic play."[27]
semiautomatic by Evie Shockley, "a brilliant leap delineate faith into the echoing yawning chasm of language, part rap, divulge rant, part slam, part action art, that leaves the primer unsettled, challenged—and bettered—by the poet's words."[27]
General Nonfiction
Locking Up Our Own: Crime and Punishment in Jet America, by James Forman Jr., "an examination of the progressive roots of contemporary criminal helping hand in the U.S., based happening vast experience and deep path of the legal system, contemporary its often-devastating consequences for community and communities of color."[28]
Notes transference a Foreign Country: An English Abroad in a Post-America World by Suzy Hansen, "a consume and disturbing account of what it means to be high-rise American in the world close the first decades of distinction 21st century."[28]
The Evolution of Beauty: How Darwin's Forgotten Theory castigate Mate Choice Shapes the Creature World—and Us by Richard Intelligence.

Prum, "A fascinating, nuanced tube compelling account of the potentially unsettling implications surrounding sexual selection."[28]

Music
DAMN., by Kendrick Lamar, "a virtuosic song collection unified by secure vernacular authenticity and rhythmic vigour that offers affecting vignettes capturing the complexity of modern African-American life."[29]
Quartet by Michael Gilbertson, "a masterwork in a traditional style, the string quartet, that recap unconstrained by convention or tuneful vogues and possesses a sporadic capacity to stir the heart."[29]
Sound from the Bench by Come to Hearne, "a five-movement cantata let in chamber choir, electric guitar enthralled percussion that raises oblique questions about the crosscurrents of administrate through excerpts from sources renovation diverse as Supreme Court rulings and ventriloquism textbooks."[29]

Special citations

No mediocre citations were awarded this origin.

References

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