Amy Tan to receive lifetime achievement award at L.A. Times Book Prizes

Finalists and honorees for the 46th Los Angeles Times Book Prizes were announced last week. Amy Tan will be honored with the Robert Kirsch Award for her body of work on multicultural identity. Other recipients include We Need Diverse Books and Adam Ross.

The Los Angeles Times announced finalists and special honorees for its 46th annual Book Prizes last week. Among the special awards, author Amy Tan, known for her 1989 debut novel "The Joy Luck Club," will receive the Robert Kirsch Award for lifetime achievement. This award recognizes literature with connections to the Western United States, highlighting Tan's exploration of multicultural identity and familial bonds. "Throughout her extraordinary career, Amy Tan has transformed American literature by shining a light on the emotional complexities of family, identity and cultural inheritance," said Sophia Kercher, Times senior editor for books. "Her work confronts the social and cultural legacies of the American West with rich details of the immigrant experience."

"The Joy Luck Club," which interweaves stories of Chinese immigrant mothers and their American-born daughters in San Francisco, was a finalist for the National Book Award and the National Book Critics Circle Award. Tan's subsequent works, including her most recent 2024 book "The Backyard Bird Chronicles," have earned her induction into the American Academy of Arts and Letters and a National Humanities Medal from President Joe Biden.

The Innovator’s Award goes to We Need Diverse Books, a nonprofit that began as a 2014 Twitter campaign to promote diversity in children’s and young adult publishing. According to the Cooperative Children’s Book Center at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, only 8% of U.S. children’s books were by authors of color at the nonprofit's launch, rising to 47% in 2023, aided by WNDB’s grants and advocacy. "We Need Diverse Books has played an important role in publishing by championing stories that reflect our world, and opening doors for writers and readers," said Times Executive Editor Terry Tang.

Novelist Adam Ross wins the Christopher Isherwood Prize for Autobiographical Prose for "Playworld," a semi-autobiographical novel about a teen in 1980s New York described as "less a bildungsroman than a story of miseducation."

In biography, Ekow Eshun is a finalist for "The Strangers: Five Extraordinary Black Men and the Worlds That Made Them." Fiction finalists include Michael Connelly and Saou Ichikawa, whose debut "Hunchback" was longlisted for the 2025 International Booker Prize. Many books address contemporary issues like historical revisionism and AI proliferation.

Winners in 13 categories, selected by genre-specialist panels, will be revealed on April 17 at USC’s Bovard Auditorium, preceding the L.A. Times Festival of Books on April 18 and 19.

مقالات ذات صلة

Indie booksellers celebrating the 2026 Indies Choice Book Awards winners in a cozy bookstore, highlighting Virginia Evans' double win.
صورة مولدة بواسطة الذكاء الاصطناعي

2026 Indies Choice Book Awards winners announced by indie booksellers

من إعداد الذكاء الاصطناعي صورة مولدة بواسطة الذكاء الاصطناعي

Independent booksellers have announced the winners of the 2026 Indies Choice Book Awards, following the shortlists revealed on March 11. The awards, returning after a seven-year hiatus, honor standout 2025 titles from the American Booksellers Association's Indie Next List, Kids’ Indie Next List, and Indies Introduce lists. Virginia Evans claimed two top honors for her work.

Following last month's announcement of finalists and special honorees, the Los Angeles Times named winners of its 46th annual Book Prizes on April 17, kicking off the weekend Festival of Books. The awards recognized excellence across 13 categories, from fiction to graphic novels.

من إعداد الذكاء الاصطناعي

From the 16-book longlist revealed in March, the Women’s Prize for Fiction has unveiled its 2026 shortlist of six novels, spotlighting debut authors and books from independent publishers. The selected works explore human connection and social roles, with the winner to receive £30,000 and the bronze Bessie statuette.

Literary Hub has published a series of 13 reviews highlighting books by trans and queer authors that received no coverage in the New York Times Book Review from 2013 to 2022. The project, titled 'What Was Lost: A Queer Accounting of the NY Times Book Review, 2013-2022,' responds to the editorial tenure of Pamela Paul, who led the section during that period and later wrote an anti-trans essay. Organized by Sandy E. Allen and Maris Kreizman, the initiative aims to address gaps in literary criticism and foster discussion on representation.

من إعداد الذكاء الاصطناعي

EL PAÍS has announced the winners of a special edition of the 2026 Ortega y Gasset Journalism Awards to mark its 50th anniversary. The recipients are Belarusian Nobel laureate Svetlana Alexievich, Nicaraguan writer Sergio Ramírez, and US editor Martin Baron. The ceremony will take place in Barcelona on May 4.

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