National Book Award finalists announced: Alameddine, Majumdar, Li and Russell are among the nominees

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Fiction by Rabih Alameddine, Megha Majumdar, and Karen Russell, along with a memoir by Yiyun Li, are among this year’s National Book Award finalists. On Tuesday, the National Book Foundation announced five nominees in each of five categories. Winners will be revealed on Nov. 19 in Manhattan. Honorary awards will go to George Saunders and Roxane Gay. Majumdar’s novel โ€œA Guardian and a Thiefโ€ is a fiction finalist. Li’s memoir โ€œThings in Nature Merely Growโ€ is a nonfiction finalist. Other categories include poetry, translated literature and young people’s literature. Each winner receives $10,000.

NEW YORK (AP) โ€” Fiction by Rabih Alameddine, Megha Majumdar and Karen Russell and a memoir of family tragedy by Yiyun Li are among this year's finalists for the National Book Award.

On Tuesday, the National Book Foundation a nnounced five nominees in each of five competitive categories, narrowing long lists of 10 unveiled last month. Winners, each of whom receive $10,000, will be revealed during a Nov. 19 dinner gala in downtown Manhattan. Honorary awards will be presented to fiction writer George Saunders and author-publisher Roxane Gay.

Majumdar is a fiction finalist for โ€œA Guardian and a Thief,โ€ her first novel since her celebrated debut, โ€œA Burning,โ€ came out in 2020. Other fiction nominees include Alameddine's โ€œThe True True Story of Raja the Gullible (and His Mother)โ€; Russell's โ€œThe Antidote,โ€ her first novel since โ€œSwamplandia!,โ€ a Pulitzer finalist in 2012; Ethan Rutherford's โ€œNorth Sunโ€ and Bryan Washington's โ€œPalaver.โ€

The fiction authors set their work everywhere from India in the near future (Majumdar) to 1930s Nebraska (Russell) to contemporary Tokyo (Washington).

Li's โ€œThings in Nature Merely Grow,โ€ a blunt and searching account of losing her two sons to suicide, is a nonfiction finalist, along with Omar El Akkad's โ€œOne Day, Everyone Will Have Always Been Against Thisโ€; Julia Ioffe's feminist history of Russia, โ€œMotherlandโ€; Claudia Rowe's โ€œWards of the State: The Long Shadow of American Foster Careโ€; and Jordan Thomas' โ€œWhen It All Burns: Fighting Fire in a Transformed World.โ€

The poetry nominees are Cathy Linh Che's โ€œBecoming Ghost,โ€ Tiana Clark's โ€œScorched Earth,โ€ Richard Siken's โ€œI Do Know Some Things,โ€ Patricia Smith's โ€œThe Intentions of Thunder: New and Selected Poemsโ€ and Gabrielle Calvocoressiโ€™s โ€œThe New Economy.โ€

In translated literature, Solvej Balle's โ€œOn the Calculation of Volume (Book III),โ€ translated from the Danish by Sophia Hersi Smith and Jennifer Russell; and Gabriela Cabezรณn Cรกmara's โ€œWe Are Green and Trembling,โ€ translated from the Spanish by Robin Myers, are among the finalists. The others include Anjet Daanje's โ€œThe Remembered Soldier,โ€ translated from the Dutch by David McKay; Hamid Ismailov's โ€œWe Computers: A Ghazal Novel,โ€ translated from the Uzbek by Shelley Fairweather-Vega; and Neige Sinno's โ€œSad Tiger,โ€ translated from the French by Natasha Lehrer.

Finalists for young people's literature include three novels-in-verse: Amber McBride's โ€œThe Leaving Room,โ€ Hannah V. Sawyerr's โ€œTruth Isโ€ and Ibi Zoboi's โ€œ(S)Kin.โ€ The other nominees are Kyle Lukoff's โ€œA World Worth Savingโ€ and Daniel Nayeri's โ€œThe Teacher of Nomad Land: A World War II Story.โ€

The National Book Awards, now in their 76th year, are chosen by panels of writers, critics and other members of the literary community. Notable works from 2025 that were not on the finalist lists include such novels as Angela Flournoy's โ€œThe Wildernessโ€ and Kiran Desai's โ€œThe Loneliness of Sonia and Sunny,โ€ and Arundhati Roy's memoir, โ€œMother Mary Comes to Me.โ€


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