The National Book Awards are presented each year to American authors for work in four categories: fiction, nonfiction, poetry, and young people's literature. Listed below are previous years' winners in the fiction category.
A Vietnam war novel spanning 1963-1970, with a large international cast of characters - extraordinary in its scope and execution.
An accident leaves twenty-seven-year-old mark Schluter with a neurological disorder that will change his life forever.
William Vollman composites 37 short pieces of historical fiction in his novel that examines the Central Europe superpowers of Germany and Russia during the turbulent mid 20th Century.
19th century Paraguay through the eyes of the country's dicatator's Irish courtesan.
Set after World War II, The Great Fire tells the story of one man and one woman attempting to reinvent their lives amidst the post-war rubble.
Glass relates the tale of a Scottish family by drawing the reader into three vital months of June over ten years.
Enid, after nearly fifty years as wife and mother, attempts to bring her decaying family together for one last Christmas in this modern portrait of the family in decline.
Sontag deftly places the reader in 19th century California where a Polish actress and her comrades fail to found their utopian commune, but succeed at so much more.
Chinese Doctor Lin Kong's love for two women contrasts ancient China with the China of the Cultural Revolution while exploring the universal struggle of the individual with society and his own heart.
When Billy dies from a life of alcoholism, family and friends eulogize him in a Bronx bar, telling his tragic story and their own.
A confederate soldier's treacherous journey home to the Blue Ridge Mountains and his wife, Ada, who meanwhile trying to survive her own challenges working the farm she inherited from her father.