1997 in literature explained
This article contains information about the literary events and publications of 1997.
Events
- February 20 – Allen Ginsberg makes a final public appearance at the NYU Poetry Slam. He continues to write through his final illness, his last poem being "Things I'll Not Do (Nostalgias)" written on March 30.[1]
- May 27 – Shakespeare's Globe in London, a reconstruction of the Elizabethan Globe Theatre, opens with a production of Shakespeare's Henry V.
- June 3 – The supposed climax of Max Beerbohm's 1916 short story Enoch Soames occurs at the old British Museum Reading Room in London.
- June 26 – J. K. Rowling's first Harry Potter novel, Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone, is published in London by Bloomsbury Publishing, in an edition of 500 copies.
- July 13 – The release occurs in Ireland of the film of Patrick McCabe's 1992 novel The Butcher Boy. The author plays Jimmy The Skite, the town drunk.
- September 1 – The Adventures of Captain Underpants, the first in Dav Pilkey's series of children's novels, is published by Scholastic.
- October – The online literary magazine Jacket is founded.
- November 24 – The new British Library building in London designed by Colin St John Wilson opens to readers.
- December 30 – The memoir I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings by Maya Angelou is removed from the ninth-grade English curriculum in Anne Arundel County, Maryland, for portraying "white people as being horrible, nasty, stupid people".[2]
Uncertain dates
- Tom Clancy signs a deal with Pearson Custom Publishing and Penguin Putnam Inc. giving him US $50 million for the world English rights to two new books. A second agreement pays another $25 million for a four-year book/multimedia deal, and a third, with Berkley Books for 24 paperbacks to tie in with an ABC television miniseries for $22 million.
- Janet Dailey admits to plagiarism of the novels of the fellow American bestselling romance writer Nora Roberts.[3] [4]
New books
Fiction
Children and young people
Drama
Poetry
See main article: article and 1997 in poetry.
Non-fiction
Births
Deaths
- January 19 – James Dickey, American poet and novelist (born 1923)[13]
- February 3 – Bohumil Hrabal, Czech novelist (born 1914)
- February 18 – Emily Hahn, American journalist and author (born 1905)
- March 21 - Wilbert Awdry, British Anglican reverend and author (born 1911)
- April 5 – Allen Ginsberg, American poet (liver cancer, born 1926)[14]
- May 9 – Rina Lasnier, Canadian poet (born 1915)
- May 23 – Alison Adburgham, English social historian and journalist (born 1912)
- June 8 – George Turner, Australian novelist and critic (born 1916)
- June 11 – Susanna Roth, Swiss bohemist and literary translator (born 1950)
- July 26 – Joseph Henry Reason, American librarian (born 1905)[15]
- August 2 – William S. Burroughs, American novelist (born 1914[16]
- August 16 – Gerard McLarnon, Irish actor and playwright (born 1915)
- August 27 – Johannes Edfelt, Swedish poet, translator and critic (born 1904)
- October 14 – Harold Robbins, American novelist (born 1916)
- October 16 – James A. Michener, American novelist and historian (born 1907)
- November 6 – Leon Forrest, African American novelist and essayist (cancer, born 1937)[17]
- November 30 – Kathy Acker, American novelist and poet (breast cancer, born 1947)[18]
- December 14 – Owen Barfield, British philosopher, author and poet (born 1898)
Awards
- Nobel Prize for Literature
Dario Fo
Robert Wilson
Pepetela
Australia
Eva Sallis, Hiam
- C. J. Dennis Prize for Poetry
Les Murray, Subhuman Redneck Poems
Anthony Lawrence, The Viewfinder
Morgan Yasbincek, Night Reversing
David Foster, The Glade Within the Grove
Canada
- Bronwen Wallace Memorial Award
Rachel Rose
Mordecai Richler, Barney's Version
France
Patrick Rambaud, La Bataille
Lydie Salvayre, La Compagnie des spectres
Spain
- Premio Miguel de Cervantes
Guillermo Cabrera Infante
United Kingdom
Arundhati Roy, The God of Small Things
Alison Brackenbury, Gillian Clarke, Tony Curtis, Anne Stevenson
Matthew Clegg, Sarah Corbett, Polly Clark, Tim Kendall, Graham Nelson, Matthew Welton
Anne Michaels, Fugitive Pieces
- Whitbread Best Book Award
Ted Hughes, Tales from Ovid
United States
Richard Blanco, City of a Hundred Fires
Fred Chappell
Richard Garfinkle, Celestial Matters
Kim Stanley Robinson, Blue Mars
Vonda McIntyre, The Moon and the Sun
no award given
Steven Millhauser –
Lisel Mueller: Alive Together: New and Selected Poems
Anthony Hecht
Fiction: Josip Novakovich (fiction/nonfiction), Melanie Rae Thon
Nonfiction: Jo Ann Beard, Suketu Mehta (fiction/nonfiction), Ellen Meloy
Plays: Erik Ehn
Poetry: Connie Deanovich, Forrest Gander, Jody Gladding, Mark Turpin
Elsewhere
Javier Marías, A Heart So White
Carlos Cañeque, Quién
Notes
- Book: Hahn . Daniel . The Oxford Companion to Children's Literature . 2015 . Oxford. University Press . 9780198715542 . 2nd.
Notes and References
- Book: Ginsberg, Allen . Collected Poems 1947–1997 . 1160–61.
- Web site: . Harry Potter, 'Huckleberry Finn' among controversial . Banned books . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20040805171342/http://www.cnn.com/2000/books/news/09/14/banned.books.ap/index.html . 2004-08-05.
- News: Wilson . Jeff . Romance novelist Janet Dailey apologizes for plagiarism . . 1997-07-30.
- News: Standora . Leo . Romance Writer Janet Dailey Sued . 1997-08-27 . New York Daily News. 2008-11-18. dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20090801054127/http://www.nydailynews.com/archives/news/1997/08/27/1997-08-27_romance_writer_janet_dailey_.html . 2009-08-01.
- Book: The Worlds of Carol Shields. University of Ottawa Press. 2014. 9780776621869. 113.
- Hahn 2015, p. 14
- Hahn 2015, p.106
- Web site: His Dark Materials . Oxford Reference . 11 January 2022 . en .
- Hahn 2015, pp. 264-265
- Hahn 2015, p. 631
- Book: Kevin Warwick. March of the Machines: Why the New Race of Robots Will Rule the World. 1997. Century. 978-0-7126-7756-1.
- Web site: L'empire des rois khmers . 1997 . livreshebdo.fr . fr . 14 April 2022.
- Web site: The Burden of James Dickey. Peter. Davison. August 1, 1998. The Atlantic.
- News: Wilborn . Hampton . Allen Ginsberg, Master Poet Of Beat Generation, Dies at 70 . New York Times . April 6, 1997 . April 14, 2008 . https://web.archive.org/web/20080311032659/http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9A0CE6D7143CF935A35757C0A961958260 . March 11, 2008 . live.
- Book: Owens, Irene . Donald G. Davis . Dictionary of American Library Biography: Second supplement . https://books.google.com/books?id=91UjM6TLRJgC&pg=PR182 . January 2003 . Libraries Unlimited . 978-1-56308-868-1 . 182–186 . Reason, Joseph Henry.
- 2003 Penguin Modern Classics edition of Junky.
- Onishi, Norimitsu. "Leon Forrest, 60, a Novelist Who Explored Black History", The New York Times, November 10, 1997.
- Kathy Acker and Transnationalism, ed. Polina Mackay and Kathryn Nicol (Cambridge Scholars, 2009)
- Faculty of Arts, 1997, Edna Staebler Award , Wilfrid Laurier University, Previous winners, Anne Mullens, Retrieved 11/17/2012