Distinguished Writer in Residence Francine Prose Writes a Retrospective on the Literature of the 2000s for the Washington Post
Francine Prose, distinguished writer in residence at Bard and author of 12 novels, contributed an essay on the literature of the 2000s to the Washington Post’s ongoing series celebrating the 75th anniversary of the National Book Awards. Prose, who was a finalist for the National Book Award in 2000, frames the 2000s as a decade when authors reflected the anxiety of current events in their work. Although writers are not reporters, she writes, “even if they don’t address the current moment in their work, they live inside that time.”
Prose’s list begins with writing about those current events, juxtaposing the 9/11 Commision Report at the beginning of the decade with Colum McCann’s Let the Great World Spin near the end of it. She also overviews nonfiction, poetry, and short stories, with special focus on the poetry of Ellen Bryant Voigt, Donald Justice, and Kevin Young. Writing about her time serving as a judge for the award in 2007, she notes that the books honored that year—including Denis Johnson’s Tree of Smoke and Mischa Berlinski’s Fieldwork—“intensely reflected the preoccupations of that time but also raised questions that remain essential—and unanswered—to this day.”
Post Date: 09-03-2024
Prose’s list begins with writing about those current events, juxtaposing the 9/11 Commision Report at the beginning of the decade with Colum McCann’s Let the Great World Spin near the end of it. She also overviews nonfiction, poetry, and short stories, with special focus on the poetry of Ellen Bryant Voigt, Donald Justice, and Kevin Young. Writing about her time serving as a judge for the award in 2007, she notes that the books honored that year—including Denis Johnson’s Tree of Smoke and Mischa Berlinski’s Fieldwork—“intensely reflected the preoccupations of that time but also raised questions that remain essential—and unanswered—to this day.”
Post Date: 09-03-2024