2008 in literature

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This article presents lists of the literary events and publications in 2008.




Contents





  • 1 Events


  • 2 New books

    • 2.1 Fiction


    • 2.2 Genre fiction


    • 2.3 Children and young people


    • 2.4 Drama


    • 2.5 Poetry


    • 2.6 Non-fiction



  • 3 Deaths


  • 4 Awards and honors

    • 4.1 Australia


    • 4.2 Canada


    • 4.3 United Kingdom


    • 4.4 United States



  • 5 References


  • 6 See also




Events



  • January 1 – In the UK's 2008 New Year Honours List, Hanif Kureishi (CBE), Jenny Uglow (OBE), Peter Vansittart (OBE) and Debjani Chatterjee (MBE) are all rewarded for "services to literature."


  • May 7–11 – First Palestine Festival of Literature.


  • June 15 – Gore Vidal, asked in a New York Times interview how he felt about the death of his great rival William F. Buckley, Jr., replies: "I thought hell is bound to be a livelier place, as he joins forever those whom he served in life, applauding their prejudices and fanning their hatred."

  • July – Salman Rushdie's Midnight's Children is the winner of a poll to select the "Best of the Booker".

  • First Twitter novels appear.


New books



Fiction



  • Aravind Adiga
    • The White Tiger


    • Between the Assassinations (November 1)



  • Uwem Akpan – Say You're One of Them


  • Paul Auster – Man in the Dark


  • Henry Bauchau – Le Boulevard périphérique


  • John Berger – From A to X


  • Charles Bock – Beautiful Children (January 22)


  • Roberto Bolaño – 2666: A Novel (November 11)


  • Christopher Buckley – Supreme Courtship (September 3)


  • Alastair Campbell – All in the Mind (October 30)


  • Martín Caparrós – A quien corresponda


  • Eleanor Catton – The Rehearsal


  • Wendy Coakley-Thompson – Triptych (December 18)


  • Robert Crais – Chasing Darkness


  • Debra Dean - Confessions of a Falling Woman


  • Klaus Ebner – Hominid (October 1)


  • Ralph Ellison (posthumous, ed. John F. Callahan) – Three Days Before the Shooting...


  • Mathias Énard – Zone (August 15)


  • Sebastian Faulks – Devil May Care (James Bond continuation novel)


  • Keith Gessen – All the Sad Young Literary Men (April 10)


  • Shanta Gokhale – Tyā varshī (Crowfall)


  • Juan Goytisolo – Exiled from Almost Everywhere


  • Lauren Groff – The Monsters of Templeton (February 5)


  • Peter Handke – The Moravian Night (January 12, Germany)


  • Johan Harstad – DARLAH


  • Zoë Heller – The Believers (September 24)


  • Aleksandar Hemon – The Lazarus Project (May 1)


  • Samantha Hunt – The Invention of Everything Else (February 7)


  • Siri Hustvedt – The Sorrows of an American (April 1)


  • Karl Iagnemma – The Expeditions (January 15)


  • Robert Juan-Cantavella – El Dorado


  • Jack Kerouac and William S. Burroughs (posthumous) – And the Hippos Were Boiled in Their Tanks (November 1; written 1945)


  • Christian Kracht – Ich werde hier sein im Sonnenschein und im Schatten (September)


  • László Krasznahorkai – Seiobo There Below


  • Jhumpa Lahiri – Unaccustomed Earth (April 1)


  • Kelly Link – Pretty Monsters (October 2)


  • David Lodge – Deaf Sentence (May 1)


  • James McBride – Song Yet Sung (February 5)


  • Joe McGinniss Jr. – The Delivery Man (January 15)


  • Ronit Matalon – The Sound of Our Steps (Kol Tsa'adenu)


  • Lydia Millet – How the Dead Dream (January 25)


  • Toni Morrison – A Mercy (November 11)

  • Nunoe Mura – GeGeGe no Nyōbō (ゲゲゲの女房)


  • Joyce Carol Oates – My Sister, My Love (June 24)


  • Chuck Palahniuk – Snuff (May 20)


  • Arturo Perez-Reverte – The Painter of Battles (January 8)


  • Jodi Picoult – Change of Heart (March 4)


  • José Luis Rodríguez Pittí – Sueños urbanos


  • Richard Price – Lush Life (March 4)


  • Ruth Rendell – Portobello (November 20)


  • Nina Revoyr – The Age of Dreaming


  • Nathaniel Rich – The Mayor's Tongue (April 8)


  • Marilynne Robinson – Home (September 2)


  • Charlotte Roche – Feuchtgebiete (February 25)


  • Philip Roth – Indignation (September 16)


  • Salman Rushdie – The Enchantress of Florence (June 3)


  • Will Self – The Butt


  • Curtis Sittenfeld – American Wife (September 2)


  • Sjón – Rökkurbýsnir (From the Mouth of the Whale) (October 23)


  • Tom Rob Smith – Child 44


  • David Turashvili – Flight from the USSR


  • John Updike – The Widows of Eastwick (October 28)


  • Tobias Wolff – Our Story Begins (March 25)


Genre fiction



  • Jim Butcher – Small Favor (April 1) (Harry Dresden #10)


  • Cornelia Funke – Inkdeath (October 7)


  • Stephen King – Duma Key (January 22)


  • Matthew J. Costello – Doom 3: Worlds on Fire (February 26)


  • Patricia A. McKillip – The Bell at Sealey Head (September 2)


  • Stephenie Meyer – Breaking Dawn (August 2)


  • Douglas Preston – Blasphemy (January 8)


  • Matthew Stover – Caine Black Knife (October 14)


  • Brent Weeks – The Way of Shadows


Children and young people



  • David Almond
    • The Savage

    • Jackdaw Summer



  • Frank Cottrell-Boyce – Desirable


  • Eoin Colfer – Artemis Fowl: The Time Paradox (July 15)


  • Suzanne Collins – The Hunger Games (September 14)


  • John Fardell – Manfred the Baddie


  • Mem Fox - Ten Little Fingers and Ten Little Toes


  • John Green – Paper Towns (October 16)


  • Brian Greene – Icarus At The Edge Of Time


  • Charlie Higson – Young Bond: By Royal Command (September 3)


  • Minoru Kawakami and Satoyasu – Horizon on the Middle of Nowhere


  • D. J. MacHale – Raven Rise (May 20)


  • Jenny Nimmo – Charlie Bone and the Shadow of Badlock (June 1)


  • Garth Nix – Superior Saturday (May 5)


  • Christopher Paolini – Brisingr (September 20)


  • Rick Riordan – The Maze of Bones


  • Angie Sage – Queste (April 8)


  • Michael Salzhauer – My Beautiful Mommy


  • Dave Barry and Ridley Pearson – Science Fair


Drama



  • Salvatore Antonio – In Gabriel's Kitchen


  • Howard Brenton – Never So Good


  • Mary Higgins Clark – Where Are You Now?

  • Paul Dwyer – The Bougainville Photoplay Project


  • Nicholas de Jongh – Plague Over England


  • Johan Heldenbergh and Mieke Dobbels – The Broken Circle Breakdown featuring the cover-ups of Alabama


  • Ella Hickson – Eight


  • Sam Holcroft – Cockroach


  • Elaine Murphy – Little Gem


  • Lynn Nottage – Ruined


  • Tyler Perry – The Marriage Counselor


  • Taavi Vartia – Kaikkien aikojen Pertsa ja Kilu


Poetry




Non-fiction



  • The Academi – Encyclopaedia of Wales (Gwyddoniadur Cymru) (January)


  • Julie Andrews – Home: A Memoir of My Early Years (April 1)


  • Kwame Anthony Appiah – Experiments in Ethics


  • Dan Ariely – Predictably Irrational (February 19)


  • Margaret Atwood – Payback: Debt and the Shadow Side of Wealth (October 1)


  • Mary Beard – Pompeii: The Life of a Roman Town


  • Dionne Brand – A Kind of Perfect Speech (Ralph Gustafson Lecture)


  • Augusten Burroughs – A Wolf at the Table (April 29)


  • Michael Chabon – Maps and Legends (May 1)


  • D. K. Chakrabarti – The Battle for Ancient India: An essay in the sociopolitics of Indian archaeology


  • Sloane Crosley – I Was Told There'd Be Cake (April 1)


  • John Duignan – The Complex: An Insider Exposes the Covert World of the Church of Scientology (October 7)


  • Eminem – The Way I Am (October 21)


  • Richard Florida – Who's Your City? (March)


  • Raymond Geuss – Philosophy and Real Politics


  • Philip Hoare – Leviathan, or The Whale (September 16)


  • Chloe Hooper – The Tall Man: Death and Life on Palm Island


  • B. B. Lal – Rāma, His Historicity, Mandir, and Setu: Evidence of Literature, Archaeology, and Other Sciences


  • Haruki Murakami (translated by Philip Gabriel) – What I Talk About When I Talk About Running (July 29)

  • Shuja Nawaz – Crossed Swords: Pakistan, Its Army, and the Wars Within


  • Frances Osborne – The Bolter: Idina Sackville

  • Chris Pash – The Last Whale


  • David Sedaris – When You Are Engulfed in Flames (June 3)


  • Vaclav Smil – Energy in Nature and Society: General Energetics of Complex Systems


  • Chunghee Sarah Soh – The Comfort Women: Sexual Violence and Postcolonial Memory in Korea and Japan


  • Kate Summerscale – The Suspicions of Mr. Whicher, or The Murder at Road Hill House (April)

  • Ronnie Thompson (pseudonym) – Screwed: The Truth About Life as a Prison Officer (January 24)


  • Bjørn Christian Tørrissen – One for the Road (January 31; translation of I pose og sekk!, 2005)


  • Barbara Walters – Audition: A Memoir (May 6)


  • Russell Wangersky – Burning Down the House: Fighting Fires and Losing Myself[1]


  • Meralda Warren and others – Mi Base side orn Pitcairn (My Favourite Place on Pitcairn, first book published in Pitkern creole)

  • Dagmar S. Wodtko, Britta Irslinger and Carolin Schneider (eds.) – Nomina im Indogermanischen Lexikon


Deaths





Margaret Truman



  • January 2 – George MacDonald Fraser, Scottish novelist and screenplay writer (born 1925)


  • January 3 – Henri Chopin, French poet (born 1922)


  • January 11 – Nancy Phelan, Australian writer (born 1913)


  • January 13 – Patricia Verdugo, Chilean journalist and writer (born 1947)


  • January 16 – Hone Tuwhare, New Zealand poet (born 1922)


  • January 17 – Edward D. Hoch, American detective fiction writer (born 1930)


  • January 26

    • John Ardagh, Nyasaland-born English journalist and writer (born 1928)


    • Abraham Brumberg, American writer and editor (born 1926)



  • January 29 – Margaret Truman, American crime novelist and singer (born 1924)


  • January 30 – Miles Kington, Northern Irish-born English journalist and writer (born 1941)




Steve Gerber



  • February 4 – Rose Hacker, English writer and journalist (born 1906)


  • February 7 – Richard Altick, American literary historian (born 1915)


  • February 8 – Phyllis A. Whitney, Japan-born American mystery writer (born 1903)


  • February 10 – Steve Gerber, American comic book writer (born 1947)


  • February 18 – Alain Robbe-Grillet, French novelist (born 1922)


  • February 21

    • Archie Hind, Scottish novelist (born 1928)


    • Robin Moore, American novelist and memoirist (born 1925)



  • February 22 – Stephen Marlowe, American science fiction and crime writer (born 1928)


  • February 28 – Julian Rathbone, English novelist (born 1935)


  • February 29 – Val Plumwood (Val Routley), Australian philosopher (born 1939)




Arthur C. Clarke



  • March 16 – Jonathan Williams, American poet (born 1929)


  • March 19

    • Arthur C. Clarke, English science fiction writer and futurologist (born 1917)


    • Hugo Claus, Belgian writer in Flemish and English (born 1929)



  • March 23 – E. A. Markham, Montserrat poet, writer and activist (born 1939)


  • April 3 – Andrew Crozier, English poet and scholar (born 1943)


  • April 7 – Ludu Daw Amar, Burmese writer and journalist (born 1915)


  • April 13 – Robert Greacen, Irish poet (born 1920)


  • April 17

    • Aimé Césaire, Martinique poet and writer in French (born 1913)


    • Zoya Krakhmalnikova, Russian writer and editor (born 1929)



  • April 18

    • Michael de Larrabeiti, English young-adult novelist and travel writer (born 1934)


    • William W. Warner, American biologist and Pulitzer Prize writer (born 1920)



  • May 1 – Elaine Dundy, American novelist, biographer and playwright (born 1921)


  • May 9 – Nuala O'Faolain, Irish critic and writer (born 1940)


  • May 11 – Jeff Torrington, Scottish novelist (born 1935)


  • May 12 – Oakley Hall, American novelist (born 1920)


  • May 14 – Roy Heath, Guyanese novelist (born 1926)


  • May 19 – Vijay Tendulkar, Indian playwright (born 1928)


  • May 23 – Alan Brien, English journalist and novelist (born 1925)


  • May 28 – Elinor Lyon, British children's writer (born 1921)




Chinghiz Aitmatov



  • June 2 – Ferenc Fejtő, Hungarian-born French historian and journalist (born 1909)


  • June 4 – Matthew Bruccoli, American biographer and scholar (born 1931)


  • June 5 – Angus Calder, British writer and scholar (born 1942)


  • June 8 – Peter Rühmkorf, German poet and writer (born 1929)


  • June 9 – Algis Budrys (John A. Sentry), American science fiction writer of Lithuanian origin (born 1931)


  • June 10

    • Chinghiz Aitmatov, Kyrgyz writer in Kyrgyz and Russian (born 1928)


    • Eliot Asinof, American novelist and baseball writer (born 1919)



  • June 16 – Mario Rigoni Stern, Italian novelist (born 1921)


  • June 18 – Tasha Tudor, American children's writer and illustrator (born 1915)


  • June 22 – Albert Cossery, Egyptian-born French novelist (born 1913)


  • June 24 – Ruth Cardoso, Brazilian anthropologist and writer (born 1930)


  • June 25 – Lyall Watson, South African scientist and new age writer (born 1939)


  • June 27 – Lenka Reinerová, Czech writer in German (born 1916)




Thomas M. Disch



  • July 1

    • Clay Felker, American magazine editor and journalist (born 1925)


    • Robert Harling, English typographer and novelist (born 1910)



  • July 2 – Simone Ortega, Spanish cookery writer (born 1919)


  • July 4

    • Thomas M. Disch, American science fiction author and poet. (born 1940)


    • Janwillem van de Wetering, Dutch novelist and writer in Dutch and English (born 1931)



  • July 20 – Roger Wolcott Hall, American memoirist and novelist (born 1919)


  • July 27 – Bob Crampsey, Scottish writer (born 1930)


  • July 30 – Peter Coke, English playwright (born 1913)




Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn



  • August 3 – Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn, Russian writer and Nobel laureate (born 1918)


  • August 7 – Simon Gray, English playwright and memoirist (born 1936)


  • August 9 – Mahmoud Darwish, Palestinian poet (born 1942)


  • August 11 – George Furth, American playwright (born 1932)


  • August 17 – Dave Freeman, American writer and advertising executive (born 1961)


  • August 23 – John Russell, English art critic (born 1919)


  • August 25 – Ahmed Faraz (Syed Akhmad Shah), Pakistani poet in Urdu (born 1931)


  • August 31 – Ken Campbell, English novelist and playwright (born 1941)




David Foster Wallace



  • September 5 – Robert Giroux, American editor and publisher (born 1914)


  • September 7 – Gregory Mcdonald, American mystery writer (born 1937)


  • September 12 – David Foster Wallace, American novelist (born 1962)


  • September 17 – James Crumley, American crime writer (born 1939)


  • September 20 – Duncan Glen, Scottish poet, critic and literary historian (born 1933)


  • September 23 – William Woodruff, English historian and autobiographer (born 1916)


  • September 29 – Hayden Carruth, American poet and literary critic (born 1921)


  • October 4 – Peter Vansittart, English novelist and historical writer (born 1920)


  • October 14 – Barrington J. Bayley, English science fiction writer (born 1937)


  • October 26 – Tony Hillerman, American mystery writer (born 1925)


  • October 27 – Es'kia Mphahlele, South African writer in English (born 1919)


  • October 29 – William Wharton (Albert William Du Aime), American novelist (born 1925)


  • October 31 – Studs Terkel, American historian and broadcaster (born 1912)


  • November 4 – Michael Crichton, American writer and scholar (born 1942)


  • November 13 – Jules Archer, American historian and author (born 1915)


  • November 14 – Kristin Hunter, American author and academic (born 1931)


  • December 1 – Dorothy Sterling, American non-fiction writer for children and historian (born 1913)[2]


  • December 15 – Anne-Catharina Vestly, Norwegian children's book author (born 1920)[3]


  • December 24 – Harold Pinter, English playwright and screenwriter (born 1930).


  • December 31 – Donald E. Westlake, American novelist (born 1933)[4]


Awards and honors



  • Camões Prize: João Ubaldo Ribeiro


  • Europe Theatre Prize: Patrice Chéreau


  • International Dublin Literary Award: Rawi Hage, De Niro's Game


  • International Prize for Arabic Fiction: Bahaa Taher, Sunset Oasis


  • Nobel Prize in Literature: J. M. G. Le Clézio


Australia



  • Miles Franklin Award: Steven Carroll, The Time We Have Taken


Canada



  • Canada Reads: Paul Quarrington, King Leary


  • Dayne Ogilvie Prize: Main award, Zoe Whittall; honours of distinction, Brian Francis, John Miller.


  • Edna Staebler Award for Creative Non-Fiction: Bruce Serafin, Stardust[5]


  • Governor General's Awards: Multiple categories; see 2008 Governor General's Awards.


  • Hilary Weston Writers' Trust Prize for Nonfiction: Taras Grescoe, Bottomfeeder: How to Eat Ethically in a World of Vanishing Seafood


  • Rogers Writers' Trust Fiction Prize: Miriam Toews, The Flying Troutmans


  • Scotiabank Giller Prize: Joseph Boyden, Through Black Spruce


  • Writers' Trust Engel/Findley Award: Michael Winter


United Kingdom



  • Bookseller/Diagram Prize for Oddest Title of the Year: The 2009-2014 World Outlook for 60-milligram Containers of Fromage Frais, Philip M. Parker


  • Carnegie Medal for children's literature: Philip Reeve, Here Lies Arthur


  • Man Booker Prize: Aravind Adiga, The White Tiger


  • Orange Broadband Prize for Fiction: to The Road Home by Rose Tremain


United States



  • Lambda Literary Awards: Multiple categories; see 2008 Lambda Literary Awards.


  • National Book Award for Fiction: to Shadow Country by Peter Matthiessen


  • National Book Critics Circle Award: to 2666 by Roberto Bolaño


  • Newbery Medal for children's literature: Laura Amy Schlitz, Good Masters! Sweet Ladies! Voices from a Medieval Village


  • PEN/Faulkner Award for Fiction: Kate Christensen, The Great Man


  • Pulitzer Prize for Fiction: Junot Diaz, The Brief and Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao


  • Whiting Awards:

Fiction: Mischa Berlinski, Laleh Khadivi, Manuel Muñoz, Benjamin Percy, Lysley Tenorio

Nonfiction: Donovan Hohn

Plays: Dael Orlandersmith

Poetry: Rick Hilles, Douglas Kearney, Julie Sheehan


References




  1. ^ Faculty of Arts, 2009, Edna Staebler Award, Wilfrid Laurier University, Previous winners, Russell Wangersky, Retrieved 11/16/2012


  2. ^ Staino, Rocco (2009-01-05). "In Memoriam: Children's Authors and Illustrators Who Died in 2008". School Library Journal. Archived from the original on February 17, 2012. Retrieved 2009-01-06. 


  3. ^ Hedeman, Anders (2008-12-15). "Anne-Cath. Vestly er død". Aftenposten (in Norwegian). Archived from the original on 2008-12-19. Retrieved 2008-12-15. 


  4. ^ The New York Times 2009-01-01.


  5. ^ Faculty of Arts, March 20, 2009, Edna Staebler Award, Wilfrid Laurier University Headlines (News Releases), Retrieved 11/27/2012



See also


  • List of literary awards

  • List of poetry awards

  • 2008 in comics

  • 2008 in Australian literature

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