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Book List - Pulitzer Prize for Fiction

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<?=$who;?> Pulitzer Prize for Fiction Winners of the Pulitzer Prize for Fiction (originally the Pulitzer Prize for the Novel)
List created by Amy O. (azulaco) on Jul 24, 2018
List Votes: 1 Books: 26 Contributors: 1 Watchers: 0 List Type: Closed
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Amy O. (azulaco)
His Family by Ernest Poole
Ernest Poole (1880 - 1950) was born in Chicago, Illinois on 23 Jan 1880, and graduated from Princeton University in 1902. He was a correspondent for the Saturday Evening Post in Europe before and during World War I. He died in Franconia, NH on 10 Jan 1950. "His Family" has remained the work...  more


2
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Amy O. (azulaco)
The Magnificent Ambersons (The Modern Library Classics) by Booth Tarkington
Winner of the Pulitzer Prize when it was first published in 1918, The Magnificent Ambersons chronicles the changing fortunes of three generations of an American dynasty. The protagonist of Booth Tarkington's great historical drama is George Amberson Minafer, the spoiled and arrogant grandson of...  more


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Amy O. (azulaco)
The Age of Innocence by Edith Wharton
Set in turn-of-the-century New York, Edith Wharton's classic novel The Age of Innocence reveals a society governed by the dictates of taste and form, manners and morals, and intricate social ceremonies. With amazing clarity and sensitivity, Edith Wharton re-creates an atmosphere in which subtle...  more


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Amy O. (azulaco)
Alice Adams by Booth Tarkington
Alice Adams, the daughter of middle-class parents, wants desperately to belong with the people of "high society" who live in her town. Ultimately, her ambitions are tempered by the realities of her situation, which she learns to accept with grace and style. Alice\'s resiliency of spirit makes...  more


5
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Amy O. (azulaco)
One of Ours (Vintage Classics) by Willa Cather
Willa Cather's Pulitzer Prize-winning narrative of the making of a young American soldierClaude Wheeler, the sensitive, aspiring protagonist of this beautifully modulated novel, resembles the youngest son of a peculiarly American fairy tale. His fortune is ready-made for him, but he refuses to...  more


6
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Amy O. (azulaco)
The Able McLaughlins by Margaret Wilson
The Able McLaughlins, Scotch Covenanters, devoted to one another, deeply pious, but humor-loving and full of the emotion and sentiment which exists under the craggy Scotch exterior, are leaders in a pioneer Iowa community, Isobel McLaughlin, mother of ten, and Wully, the oldest son, are...  more


7
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Amy O. (azulaco)
So Big (Perennial Classics) by Edna Ferber
Winner of the 1924 Pulitzer Prize, So Big is widely regarded as Edna Ferber's crowning achievement. A rollicking panorama of Chicago's high and low life, this stunning novel follows the travails of gambler's daughter Selina Peake DeJong as she struggles to maintain her dignity, her family, and...  more


8
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Amy O. (azulaco)
Early Autumn: A Story of a Lady by Louis Bromfield
Early Autumn is the tale of the struggle between life and death in a New England family, old and decayed, but of a high name and tradition once distinguished in the history of America. Its chief character is Olivia Pentland, beautiful, an "outsider" from Chicago who married into the...  more


9
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Amy O. (azulaco)
The Bridge of San Luis Rey (Perennial Classics) by Thornton Wilder
This beautiful new edition features unpublished notes for the novel and other illuminating documentary material, all of which is included in a new Afterword by Tappan Wilder. "On Friday noon, July the twentieth, 1714, the finest bridge in all Peru broke and precipitated five travelers into the...  more


10
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Amy O. (azulaco)
Scarlet Sister Mary: A Novel by Julia Peterkin
Rejecting the prevailing sentimental stereotypes of her times, Julia Peterkin (1880-1961) portrayed her black characters with sympathy and understanding, endowing them with the full dimensions of human consciousness. In a series of stories and novels, she tapped the richness of rural southern...  more


11
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Amy O. (azulaco)
Laughing Boy (Signet Classics) by Oliver La Farge
This Pulitzer Prize-winning novel captures the essence of the Southwest in the early 1900s-and depicts a young Native American couple experiencing all the uncertainties and joys of first love. Laughing Boy is one of the most powerful novels in American fiction. "Lucid beauty, vital artistic...  more


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Amy O. (azulaco)
Years of Grace by Margaret Ayer Barnes
No description available.


13
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Amy O. (azulaco)
The Good Earth by Pearl S. Buck
Pearl S. Buck's epic Pulitzer Prize-winning novel of a China that was -- now in a Contemporary Classics edition. Though more than sixty years have passed since this remarkable novel won the Pulitzer Prize, it has retained its popularity and become one of the great modern classics. "I...  more


14
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Amy O. (azulaco)
The Store by Thomas S. Stribling
The hero of this remarkably vivid novel is Colonel Miltiades Vaiden, a Southern gentlement of the old school, a veteran of the bloody battle of Shiloh and a leader of the Ku Klux Klan during the turbulent Reconstruction years following the Civil War. But The Store is much more than this one...  more


15
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Amy O. (azulaco)
Lamb in His Bosom by Caroline Miller
In 1934, Caroline Miller's novel Lamb in His Bosom won the Pulitzer Prize for Literature. It was the first novel by a Georgia author to win a Pulitzer, soon followed by Margaret Mitchell's Gone With the Wind in 1937. In fact, Lamb was largely responsible for the discovery of Gone With the Wind;...  more


16
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Amy O. (azulaco)
Now in November by Josephine Johnson
Poetic, evocative, and savage, this Pulitzer Prize-winning first novel (1934) depicts a white, middle-class urban family that is turned into dirt-poor farmers by the Depression and the great drought of the 1930s. The novel moves through the seasons of a single year — and at the same time, a...  more


17
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Amy O. (azulaco)
Honey in the Horn by Harold Lenoir Davis
The virtues of the frontier live again in the lives and characters of Oregon settlers during the homesteading period from 1906-1908.  Davis received the Harper's Prize for fiction the year it was published (1935) and the Pulitzer Prize in 1936. 


18
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Amy O. (azulaco)
Gone with the Wind by Margaret Mitchell
Margaret Mitchell's epic novel of love and war won the Pulitzer Prize and went on to give rise to two authorized sequels and one of the most popular and celebrated movies of all time. Many novels have been written about the Civil War and its aftermath. None take us into the burning fields and...  more


19
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Amy O. (azulaco)
The Late George Apley by John P. Marquand
Sweeping us into the inner sanctum of Boston society, into the Beacon Hill town houses and exclusive private clubs where only the city's wealthiest and most powerful congregate, this novel gives us--through the story of one family and its patriarch, the recently deceased George Apley--the...  more


20
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Amy O. (azulaco)
The Yearling by Marjorie Kinnan Rawlings
RELIVE THE WONDER OF A CHILDHOOD FAVORITE THAT HAS BEEN CAPTURING THE HEARTS OF READERS FOR MORE THAN HALF A CENTURY. An instant bestseller when it was released in 1938, this Pulitzer Prize winner has been read and loved by school-age children across the nation for more than fifty years. In...  more


21
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Amy O. (azulaco)
The Grapes of Wrath by John Steinbeck
One of the greatest and most socially significant novels of the twentieth century, Steinbeck's controversial masterpiece indelibly captured America during the Great Depression through the story of one Oklahoma farm family, the Joads. Intensely human yet majestic in its scale and moral vision,...  more


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Amy O. (azulaco)
In This Our Life by Ellen Glasgow
No description available.


23
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Amy O. (azulaco)
Dragon's Teeth by Upton Sinclair
This novel embraces the period from the Wall Street Crash of 1929 to the Nazi Blood Purge of 1934. Wm. Schuman, Professor of Political Science at Williams College said "There is nothing I have read, in prose or verse, fiction of fact, which has impressed me so vividly with the realities of...  more


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Amy O. (azulaco)
Journey in the Dark by Martin Flavin
THIS IS FLAVIN'S BEST-KNOWN NOVEL. IT WON THE PULITZER PRIZE IN 1944... FROM MSN ENCARTA: "Flavin's best-known novel, Journey in the Dark (1943), describes a man's rise from youthful poverty to wealth as a wallpaper manufacturer in Chicago." Journey in the Dark...  more


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Amy O. (azulaco)
A Bell For Adano by John Hersey
An Italian-American major in World War II wins the love and admiration of the local townspeople when he searches for a replacement for the 700 year-old town bell that had been melted down for bullets by the fascists.


26
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Amy O. (azulaco)
All the King's Men by Robert Penn Warren
All the King's Men tells the story of Willie Stark, a southern-fried politician who builds support by appealing to the common man and playing dirty politics with the best of the back-room deal-makers. Though Stark quickly sheds his idealism, his right-hand man, Jack Burden -- who narrates the...  more


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Comment added 7/25/18 by Amy O. (azulaco):
Books are listed in the order of the year they won the Pulitzer prize.