National Book Award for Fiction


The National Book Award for Fiction is one of five annual National Book Awards, which recognize outstanding literary work by United States citizens. Since 1987 the awards have been administered and presented by the National Book Foundation, but they are awards "by writers to writers". The panelists are five "writers who are known to be doing great work in their genre or field".
General fiction was one of four categories when the awards were re-established in 1950. For several years beginning 1980, prior to the Foundation, there were multiple fiction categories: hardcover, paperback, first novel or first work of fiction; from 1981 to 1983 hardcover and paperback children's fiction; and only in 1980 five awards to mystery fiction, science fiction, and western fiction. When the Foundation celebrated the 60th postwar awards in 2009, all but three of the 77 previous winners in fiction categories were in print. The 77 included all eight 1980 winners but excluded the 1981 to 1983 children's fiction winners.
The award recognizes one book written by a U.S. citizen and published in the U.S. from December 1 to November 30. The National Book Foundation accepts nominations from publishers until June 15, requires mailing nominated books to the panelists by August 1, and announces five finalists in October. The winner is announced on the day of the final ceremony in November. The award is $10,000 and a bronze sculpture; other finalists get $1000, a medal, and a citation written by the panel.
Authors who have won the award more than once include such noted figures as William Faulkner, John Updike, William Gaddis, Jesmyn Ward, and Philip Roth, each having won the award on two occasions along with numerous other nominations. Saul Bellow won the award in three different decades and is the only author to have won the National Book Award for Fiction three times.

National Book Awards for Fiction

From 1935 to 1941 there were six annual awards for general fiction and the "Bookseller Discovery" or "Most Original Book" was sometimes a novel. From 1980 to 1985 there were six annual awards to first novels or first works of fiction. In 1980 there were five awards to mystery, western, or science fiction. There have been many awards to fiction in the Children's or Young People's categories.

Finalists, general fiction

This list covers only the post-war awards to general fiction for adult readers: one annual winner from 1950 except two undifferentiated winners 1973 to 1975, dual hardcover and paperback winners 1980 to 1983.
For each award, the winner is listed first followed by the finalists. Unless otherwise noted, the year represents the year the award was given for books published in the prior year. Thus, the award year 1950 is for books published in 1949.

1950 to 1959

1950: Nelson AlgrenThe Man with the Golden Arm
1951: William Faulkner — Collected Stories of William Faulkner
1952: James JonesFrom Here to Eternity
  • James Agee — The Morning Watch
  • Truman Capote — The Grass Harp
  • William Faulkner — Requiem for a Nun
  • Caroline Gordon — The Strange Children
  • Thomas Mann — The Holy Sinner
  • John P. Marquand — Melville Goodwin USA
  • J.D. Salinger — The Catcher in the Rye
  • William Styron — Lie Down in Darkness
  • Jessamyn West — The Witch Diggers
  • Herman Wouk — The Caine Mutiny
1953: Ralph EllisonInvisible Man
1954: Saul Bellow — The Adventures of Augie March
1955: William Faulkner — A Fable
1956: John O'HaraTen North Frederick
  • Paul Bowles — The Spider's House
  • Shirley Ann Grau — The Black Prince, and Other Stories
  • MacKinlay Kantor — Andersonville
  • Flannery O'Connor — A Good Man is Hard to Find
  • May Sarton — Faithful Are the Wounds
  • Robert Penn Warren — Band of Angels
  • Eudora Welty — The Bride of the Innisfallen
  • Herman Wouk — Marjorie Morningstar
1957: Wright MorrisThe Field of Vision
1958: John CheeverThe Wapshot Chronicle
  • James Agee — A Death in the Family
  • James Gould Cozzens — By Love Possessed
  • Mark Harris — Something About a Soldier
  • Andrew Lytle — The Velvet Horn
  • Bernard Malamud — The Assistant
  • Wright Morris — Love Among the Cannibals
  • Vladimir Nabokov — Pnin
  • Ayn Rand — Atlas Shrugged
  • Nancy Wilson Ross — The Return of Lady Brace
  • May Sarton — The Birth of a Grandfather
1959: Bernard MalamudThe Magic Barrel
1960: Philip Roth — Goodbye, Columbus
  • Louis Auchincloss — Pursuit of the Prodigal
  • Hamilton Basso — The Light Infantry Ball
  • Saul Bellow — Henderson the Rain King
  • Evan S. Connell, Jr. — Mrs. Bridge
  • William Faulkner — The Mansion
  • Mark Harris — Wake Up, Stupid
  • John Hersey — The War Lover
  • H.L. Humes — Men Die
  • Shirley Jackson — The Haunting of Hill House
  • Elizabeth Janeway — The Third Choice
  • James Jones — The Pistol
  • Warren Miller — The Cool World
  • James Purdy — Malcolm
  • Leo Rosten — The Return of H*Y*M*A*N K*A*P*L*A*N
  • John Updike — The Poorhouse Fair
  • Robert Penn Warren — The Cave
  • Morris West — The Devil's Advocate
1961: Conrad RichterThe Waters of Kronos
1962: Walker PercyThe Moviegoer
  • Hortense Calisher — False Entry
  • George P. Elliott — Among the Dangs
  • Joseph Heller — Catch-22
  • Bernard Malamud — A New Life
  • William Maxwell — The Chateau
  • J. D. Salinger — Franny and Zooey
  • Isaac Bashevis Singer — The Spinoza of Market Street and Other Stories
  • Edward Lewis Wallant — The Pawnbroker
  • Joan Williams — The Morning and the Evening
  • Richard Yates — Revolutionary Road
1963: J. F. Powers — Morte d'Urban
1964: John Updike — The Centaur
  • Bernard Malamud — Idiots First
  • Mary McCarthy — The Group
  • Thomas Pynchon — V.
  • Harvey Swados — The Will
1965: Saul Bellow — Herzog
1966: Katherine Anne PorterThe Collected Stories of Katherine Anne Porter
  • Jesse Hill Ford — The Liberation of Lord Byron Jones
  • Peter Matthiessen — At Play in the Fields of the Lord
  • James Merrill — The Notebook
  • Flannery O'Connor — Everything That Rises Must Converge
  • Harry Mark Petrakis — Pericles on 31st Street
1967: Bernard Malamud — The Fixer
1968: Thornton WilderThe Eighth Day
  • Norman Mailer — Why Are We in Vietnam?
  • Joyce Carol Oates — A Garden of Earthly Delights
  • Chaim Potok — The Chosen
  • William Styron — Confessions of Nat Turner
1969: Jerzy KosińskiSteps
1970: Joyce Carol Oatesthem
  • Leonard Gardner — Fat City
  • Leonard Michaels — Going Places
  • Jean Stafford — The Collected Stories of Jean Stafford
  • Kurt Vonnegut, Jr. — Slaughterhouse Five or The Children's Crusade
1971: Saul Bellow — Mr. Sammler's Planet
1972: Flannery O'ConnorThe Complete Stories
1973: John BarthChimera
1973: John Edward WilliamsAugustus
  • Brock Brower — The Late Great Creature
  • Alan H. Friedman — Hermaphrodeity
  • Barry Hannah — Geronimo Rex
  • George V. Higgins — The Friends of Eddie Coyle
  • R.M. Koster — The Prince
  • Vladimir Nabokov — Transparent Things
  • Ishmael Reed — Mumbo Jumbo
  • Thomas Rogers — The Confessions of a Child of the Century
  • Isaac Bashevis Singer — Enemies, A Love Story
  • Eudora Welty — The Optimist's Daughter
1974: Thomas PynchonGravity's Rainbow

1974: Isaac Bashevis SingerA Crown of Feathers and Other Stories
  • Doris Betts — Beasts of the Southern Wild and Other Stories
  • John Cheever — The World of Apples
  • Ellen Douglas — Apostles of Light
  • Stanley Elkin — Searches and Seizures
  • John Gardner — Nickel Mountain
  • John Leonard — Black Conceit
  • Thomas McGuane — Ninety-Two in the Shade
  • Wilfrid Sheed — People Will Always Be Kind
  • Gore Vidal — Burr
  • Joy Williams — State of Grace
1975: Robert StoneDog Soldiers

1975: Thomas WilliamsThe Hair of Harold Roux
  • Donald Barthelme — Guilty Pleasures
  • Gail Godwin — The Odd Woman
  • Joseph Heller — Something Happened
  • Toni Morrison — Sula
  • Vladimir Nabokov — Look at the Harlequins!
  • Grace Paley — Enormous Changes at the Last Minute
  • Philip Roth — My Life As a Man
  • Mark Smith — The Death of a Detective
1976: William Gaddis — J R

  • Saul Bellow — Humboldt's Gift
  • Hortense Calisher — The Collected Stories of Hortense Calisher
  • Johanna Kaplan — Other People's Lives
  • Vladimir Nabokov — Tyrants Destroyed and Other Stories
  • Larry Woiwode — Beyond the Bedroom Wall
1977: Wallace StegnerThe Spectator Bird
  • Raymond Carver — Will You Please Be Quiet, Please?
  • MacDonald Harris — The Balloonist
  • Ursula K. Le Guin — Orsinian Tales
  • Cynthia Propper Seton — A Fine Romance
1978: Mary Lee SettleBlood Tie

  • Robert Coover — The Public Burning
  • Peter De Vries — Madder Music
  • James Alan McPherson — Elbow Room
  • John Sayles — Union Dues
1979: Tim O'BrienGoing After Cacciato'
For 1980 to 1983 this list covers the paired "Fiction " and "Fiction " awards in that order. Hard and paper editions were distinguished only in these four years; none of the paperback winners were original; in their first editions all had been losing finalists in 1979 or 1981.
From 1980 to 1985 there was also one award for first novel or first work of fiction and in 1980 there were five more awards for mystery, western, and science fiction.
None of those are covered here.
1980 hardcover: William StyronSophie's Choice
1980 paperback: John IrvingThe World According to Garp
1981 hardcover: Wright Morris — Plains Song: For Female Voices
  • Shirley Hazzard — The Transit of Venus
  • William Maxwell — So Long, See You Tomorrow
  • Walker Percy — The Second Coming
  • Eudora Welty — The Collected Stories of Eudora Welty
1981 paperback: John Cheever — The Stories of John Cheever
  • Thomas Flanagan — The Year of the French
  • Norman Mailer — The Executioner's Song
  • Scott Spencer — Endless Love
  • Herman Wouk — War and Remembrance
1982 hardcover: John Updike — Rabbit is Rich

1982 paperback: William MaxwellSo Long, See You Tomorrow
1983 hardcover: Alice WalkerThe Color Purple
  • Gail Godwin — A Mother and Two Daughters
  • Bobbie Ann Mason — Shiloh and Other Stories
  • Paul Theroux — The Mosquito Coast
  • Anne Tyler — Dinner at the Homesick Restaurant
1983 paperback: Eudora Welty — The Collected Stories of Eudora Welty
  • David Bradley — The Chaneysville Incident
  • Mary Gordon — The Company of Women
  • Marilynne Robinson — Housekeeping
  • Robert Stone — A Flag for Sunrise
1983 entries were published during 1982; winners in 27 categories were announced April 13 and privately celebrated April 28, 1983.
1984 entries for the "revamped" awards in three categories were published November 1983 to October 1984; eleven finalists were announced October 17. Winners were announced and celebrated November 15, 1984.
1984: Ellen Gilchrist

1985: Don DeLilloWhite Noise
  • Ursula K. Le Guin — Always Coming Home
  • Hugh Nissenson — The Tree of Life
1986: E. L. Doctorow — World's Fair
1987: Larry HeinemannPaco's Story
  • Alice McDermott — That Night
  • Toni Morrison — Beloved
  • Howard Norman — The Northern Lights
  • Philip Roth — The Counterlife
1988: Pete DexterParis Trout
1989: John CaseySpartina
1990: Charles JohnsonMiddle Passage
  • Felipe Alfau — Chromos
  • Elena Castedo — Paradise
  • Jessica Hagedorn — Dogeaters
  • Joyce Carol Oates — Because It Is Bitter, and Because It Is My Heart
1991: Norman RushMating
1992: Cormac McCarthyAll the Pretty Horses
  • Dorothy Allison — Bastard Out of Carolina
  • Cristina García — Dreaming in Cuban
  • Edward P. Jones — Lost in the City
  • Robert Stone — Outerbridge Reach
1993: E. Annie Proulx — The Shipping News
1994: William Gaddis — A Frolic of His Own
  • Ellen Currie — Moses Supposes
  • Richard Dooling — White Man's Grave
  • Howard Norman — The Bird Artist
  • Grace Paley — The Collected Stories
1995: Philip Roth — Sabbath's Theater

  • Madison Smartt Bell — All Souls' Rising
  • Edwidge Danticat — Krik? Krak!
  • Stephen Dixon — Interstate
  • Rosario Ferré — The House on the Lagoon
1996: Andrea BarrettShip Fever and Other Stories
  • Ron Hansen — Atticus
  • Elizabeth McCracken — The Giant's House
  • Steven Millhauser — '
  • Janet Peery — The River Beyond the World
1997: Charles FrazierCold Mountain

1998: Alice McDermottCharming Billy
  • Allegra Goodman — Kaaterskill Falls
  • Gayl Jones — The Healing
  • Robert Stone — Damascus Gate
  • Tom Wolfe — A Man in Full
1999: Ha JinWaiting
2000: Susan SontagIn America
  • Charles Baxter — The Feast of Love
  • Alan Lightman — The Diagnosis
  • Joyce Carol Oates — Blonde
  • Francine Prose — Blue Angel
2001: Jonathan FranzenThe Corrections
2002: Julia GlassThree Junes
  • Mark Costello — Big If
  • Adam Haslett — You Are Not a Stranger Here
  • Martha McPhee — Gorgeous Lies
  • Brad Watson — The Heaven of Mercury
2003: Shirley HazzardThe Great Fire
2004: Lily TuckThe News from Paraguay
  • Sarah Shun-lien Bynum — Madeleine is Sleeping
  • Christine Schutt — Florida
  • Joan Silber — '
  • Kate Walbert — Our Kind
2005: William T. Vollmann — Europe Central

2006: Richard PowersThe Echo Maker
  • Mark Z. Danielewski — Only Revolutions
  • Ken Kalfus — A Disorder Peculiar to the Country
  • Dana Spiotta — Eat the Document
  • Jess Walter — The Zero
2007: Denis JohnsonTree of Smoke
2008: Peter MatthiessenShadow Country
  • Aleksandar Hemon — The Lazarus Project
  • Rachel Kushner — Telex from Cuba
  • Marilynne Robinson — Home
  • Salvatore Scibona — The End
2009: Colum McCannLet the Great World Spin
2010: Jaimy GordonLord of Misrule
  • Peter Carey — Parrot and Olivier in America
  • Nicole Krauss — Great House
  • Lionel Shriver — So Much for That
  • Karen Tei Yamashita — I Hotel
2011: Jesmyn Ward — Salvage the Bones
2012: Louise ErdrichThe Round House
2013: James McBrideThe Good Lord Bird
2014: Phil KlayRedeployment
  • Rabih Alameddine — An Unnecessary Woman
  • Anthony Doerr — All the Light We Cannot See
  • Emily St. John Mandel — Station Eleven
  • Marilynne Robinson — Lila
2015: Adam JohnsonFortune Smiles
  • Karen Bender — Refund: Stories
  • Lauren Groff — Fates and Furies
  • Angela Flournoy — The Turner House
  • Hanya Yanagihara — A Little Life
2016: Colson WhiteheadThe Underground Railroad
  • Chris Bachelder — The Throwback Special
  • Paulette Jiles — News of the World
  • Karan Mahajan — The Association of Small Bombs
  • Jacqueline Woodson — Another Brooklyn
2017: Jesmyn Ward — Sing, Unburied, Sing
2018: Sigrid Nunez, The Friend
  • Jamel Brinkley — A Lucky Man
  • Lauren Groff — Florida
  • Brandon Hobson — Where the Dead Sit Talking
  • Rebecca Makkai — The Great Believers
'2019: Susan Choi, Trust Exercise

The National Book Awards for 1935 to 1940 annually recognized the "Most Distinguished Novel" or "Favorite Fiction". Furthermore, works of fiction were eligible for the "Bookseller Discovery" and "Most Original Book" awards; fiction winners are listed here.
There was only one National Book Award for 1941, the Bookseller Discovery, which recognized the novel Hold Autumn In Your Hand by George Perry; then none until the 1950 revival in three categories including Fiction.

Most Distinguished Novel (1935-1936)

1935: Rachel Field, Time Out of Mind
1936:
Margaret Mitchell, Gone With the Wind

Favorite Fiction (1937-1940)

1937: A. J. Cronin, The Citadel
1938:
Daphne Du Maurier, Rebecca
1939: John Steinbeck, The Grapes of Wrath
1940:
Richard Llewellyn, How Green Was My Valley

Bookseller Discovery (1936 to 1941)

1936: Norah Lofts, I Met a Gypsy
1937:
Lawrence Watkin, On Borrowed Time
1938: see nonfiction
1939: Elgin Groseclose, Ararat
1940: see nonfiction
1941:
George Sessions Perry, Hold Autumn in Your Hand

Most Original Book (1935 to 1939)

1935: Charles G. Finney, The Circus of Dr. Lao
1936: see nonfiction
1937: see nonfiction
1938: see nonfiction
1939:
Dalton Trumbo, Johnny Got His Gun

Repeat winners