Lillian Smith Book Award

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Lillian Smith Book Award emblem
Lillian Smith Book Award emblem

Jointly presented by the Southern Regional Council and the University of Georgia Libraries, the Lillian Smith Book Awards honor those authors who, through their outstanding writing about the American South, carry on Smith's legacy of elucidating the condition of racial and social inequity and proposing a vision of justice and human understanding.

Since 1968, the awards have been presented annually, except for 2003 when the Southern Regional Council experienced funding shortfalls.[1] It is the South's oldest and best-known book award, and is presented in fiction and non-fiction categories.[2]

Contents

[edit] Past Honorees

[edit] 1968 Winner

[edit] 1969 Winner

  • Dan T. Carter for Scottsboro: A Tragedy of the American South, Louisiana State University Press.

[edit] 1970 Winner

[edit] 1971 Winner

[edit] 1972 Winner

[edit] 1973 Winners

  • Harold Martin for Ralph McGill, Reporter, Little Brown and Company.

[edit] 1974 Winners

[edit] 1976 Winners

[edit] 1977 Winners

[edit] 1978 Winners

[edit] 1979 Winners

  • Marion Wright and Arnold Shankman for Human Rights Odyssey, Moore Publishing.

[edit] 1980 Winners

[edit] 1981 Winners

[edit] 1982 Winners

[edit] 1983 Winners

[edit] 1984 Winners

  • Alice Walker for In Search of Our Mother's Gardens: Womanist Prose, Harcourt Brace Jovanovich.

[edit] 1985 Winners

  • Peter Taylor for The Old Forest and Other Stories, Dial Press.

[edit] 1986 Winner

  • A.J. Mojtabai for Blessed Assurance: At Home with the Bomb in Amarillo, Texas, Houghton Mifflin.

[edit] 1987 Winners

  • Thomas L. Johnson, and Phillip C. Dunn (ed.) for A True Likeness: The Black South of Richard Samuel Roberts, 1920-1936, Algonquin Books.

[edit] 1988 Winners

[edit] 1989 Winners

[edit] 1990 Winners

  • Dori Sanders for Clover: A Novel, Algonquin Books.

[edit] 1991 Winners

  • J.L. Chestnut, Jr., and Julia Cass for Black in Selma : The Uncommon Life of J.L. Chestnut, Jr.: Politics and Power in a Small American Town, Farrar, Straus & Giroux.

[edit] 1992 Winners

[edit] 1993 Winners

  • Charles W. Eagles for Outside Agitator: Jon Daniels and the Civil Rights Movement in Alabama, University of North Carolina Press.
  • William Baldwin for The Hard To Catch Mercy, Algonquin Books of Chapel Hill.
  • Margaret Rose Gladney for How Am I To Be Heard? Letters of Lillian Smith, University of North Carolina Press.

[edit] 1994 Winners

  • John Dittmer for Local People: The Struggle for Civil Rights in Mississippi, University of Illinois Press.

[edit] 1995 Winners

  • Charles M. Payne for I've Got the Light of Freedom: The Organizing Tradition and the Mississippi Freedom Struggle, University of California Press.
  • Adam Fairclough for Race & Democracy: The Civil Rights Struggle in Louisiana, 1915-1972, University of Georgia Press.

[edit] 1996 Winners

  • Michael D'Orso for Like Judgment Day: The Ruin and Redemption of a Town Called Rosewood, Grosset/Putnam.
  • Constance Curry for Silver Rights, Algonquin Books of Chapel Hill.
  • Anthony Grooms for Trouble No More, La Questa.

[edit] 1997 Winners

[edit] 1998 Winners

  • John Lewis for Walking with the Wind: A Memoir of the Movement, with Michael D'Orso, Simon & Schuster.

[edit] 1999 Winners

  • J. Morgan Kousser for "Colorblind Injustice: Minority Voting Rights and the Undoing of the Second Reconstruction", University of North Carolina Press.
  • Leroy Davis for A Clashing of the Soul: John Hope and the Dilemma of African-American Leadership and Black Higher Education in the Early Twentieth Century, University of Georgia Press.

[edit] 2000 Winners

  • Lawrence N. Powell for Troubled Memory: Anne Levy, The Holocaust, and David Duke's Louisiana, University of North Carolina Press.
  • Michael Keith Honey for Black Workers Remember: An Oral History of Segregation, Unionism and the Freedom Struggle, University of California Press.

[edit] 2001 Winners

  • Hal Crowther for Cathedrals of Kudzu: A Personal Landscape of the South, Louisiana State University Press.
  • Pam Durban for So Far Back, Picador USA Robert P. “Bob” Moses, Charles E. Cobb, Jr., Radical Equations, Beacon Press.
  • Natasha Trethewey for Domestic Work, Graywolf Press.

[edit] 2002 Winners

  • Anthony Grooms for Bombingham, Free Press.
  • Keith Wailoo for Dying in the City of the Blues: Sickle Cell Anemia and the Politics of Race and Health, University of North Carolina Press.
  • William H. Chafe, Raymond Gavins, and Robert Korstad editors, with Paul Ortiz, Robert Parrish, Jennifer Ritterhouse, Keisha Roberts, Remembering Jim Crow: African Americans Tell About Life in the Segregated South, The New Press.

[edit] 2004 Winners

  • Barbara Ransby for Ella Baker and the Black Freedom Movement; A Radical Democratic Vision, University of North Carolina Press.
  • Frank X. Walker for Buffalo Dance, The Journey of York, The University Press of Kentucky.

[edit] 2005 Winners

[edit] 2006 Winners

[edit] References

  1. ^ USATODAY.com - Lillian Smith Book Awards for works on social justice to be revived
  2. ^ Columns

[edit] External links