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Dave Cullen

Dave Cullen
Location
New York, New York, USA
Birthday
June 03
Title
Author/Journalist
Company
Written for NY Times, W Post, Slate, Salon, Daily Beast. Publisher Twelve (Hachette)
Bio
An expanded paperback edition of my book COLUMBINE came out March 1, 2010. Links to the book and my bio below: http://www.davecullen.com/columbine.htm

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Editor’s Pick
OCTOBER 14, 2009 1:11PM

National Book Awards: Announcing the finalists

Rate: 20 Flag

The list is out. Congratulations to all the finalists.

I have special admiration for the nonfiction finalists, having gone through that little adventure (of creating one):

  • David M. Carroll, Following the Water: A Hydromancer's Notebook(Houghton Mifflin Harcourt)
  • Sean B. Carroll, Remarkable Creatures: Epic Adventures in the Search for the Origins of Species (Houghton Mifflin Harcourt)
  • Greg Grandin, Fordlandia: The Rise and Fall of Henry Ford's Forgotten Jungle City (Metropolitan Books/Henry Holt)
  • Adrienne Mayor, The Poison King: The Life and Legend of Mithradates, Rome's Deadliest Enemy (Princeton University Press)
  • T. J. Stiles, The First Tycoon: The Epic Life of Cornelius Vanderbilt(Alfred A. Knopf)

 God, I don't know any of the authors, or the books. Usually I know several of the fiction authors/books and one or two of the nonfiction. I guess I've got some reading to do.

Winners will be announced at a ceremony in NYC Nov. 18.

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And if you find the sea of book awards a bit confusing, this piece gives a good basic overview.  A snippet:

"If you say to a writer, 'What do you want to win,' they wouldn't say the Nobel because that would suggest they're kind of insane," Cheuse says. "It's like saying they want to be immortal."

Much better to shoot for a Pulitzer. Coveting the Pulitzer is like saying you only need to live to be 112.

The Pulitzers go to epic, fat, sweeping American novels, like "A Thousand Acres" and "Empire Falls." American experiences. American themes. Judges are always describing the finalists as "haunting" or emotionally walloping, or downright painful.

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Questions for you guys:

Have any of you read any of these? I'd love to know what you think. 

Any crimes of omission?

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Comments

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Damnation! First I get overlooked for the Nobel, now this. I'm very, very upset.
R
Looks like the left out the author of "Columbine" - one of the best books of the year.
yes, they decided to go a different route, as they say. haha. thanks for thinking of me, sheldon.
Thanks for posting this, Dave. John, next year.
thanks, kathy.

oh, if i could write a book a year. you mean next decade? hahaha. (although technically, in this case, those would be the same thing.)

i don't think the NBAs are really where i was likely to hit. did you see the list? hopefully it will get some recognition, but it wasn't likely to be there.
Yeah, where's your name? I started reading T.J. Styles' book but something interrupted me. I'm a little surprised at the list; I've read more nonfiction this year than usual (okay "usual" is next to none but still!) and I don't really know these books.
I don't get it. Maybe when Oprah puts you on her list, the NBA committee takes your name off of theirs. Or maybe the history you were writing about was a century too young...
I'd like to read "Forlandia." What a bizarre but fascinating story. Saw a show about it on Discovery or PBS.
Wow. Apart from the book about water, it's like they were all picked by one person who really likes grand epic stories about grand epic men and their giant empire/civilizations/academic theories. I wonder which juror likes those kind of books. Not Camille Paglia!?
I thought the same thing, Juliet. And sorry you weren't on the list, Dave.
I like the fiction list though. And I would kill to be on a jury with Junot Diaz and Lydia Millet. That must have been fun.
Whaaaaa? I thought you were an expert on all things Cornelius Vanderbilt. Wow, you sure had me fooled Dave. ; )
"Adrienne Mayor, The Poison King: The Life and Legend of Mithradates, Rome's Deadliest Enemy (Princeton University Press)"

This was EXCELLENT! Sorry, I'm a total bookie and this definitely deserves it! It is not "mainstream", so it is hard when these awards come out. It takes ancient Roman times and makes it readable, and Mayor takes you into Mithradates' life with her way of storytelling. You have to have a stomach for battle, and his specialty of knowing "poisons", hence the title, which saves his life on numerous occasions. I can not recommend it enough. I honestly stumbled upon it - I'm a lover of history and politics so I read a lot of different things. I'm actually surprised it won, didn't think it would receive the attention, but do believe it deserved it....

Of course, right next to you. ;-)
They misspelled my name!!!!!!!!
I've only heard of the Vanderbilt one because I read NYTimes review every week and that one stood out to me because I had just been to Ashville and stayed on the property for the holidays. It was freakin' amazing! What a way to spend a couple of days. And I've been to the Vanderbilt home in the Hudson Valley. There is nothing like OLD money. Fascinating homes...
Haven't heard of any of these, doubt that I would read any of them either. But I read medical texts non-stop, so go figure.
In Canada CBC radio runs a program called Canada Reads every year. It's sort of like Survivor for books (without the immunity challenges). The winners have little in common, except being persistently great. If there were a similar program in the US- you'd be a shoo in!
Dude, whatever their route, it should have included you. Who do I call for a recount?
Send me books! I live in Bumfuck, Mexico, and am currently re-reading the tags on my thrift-store clothes. Dunno what criteria these folks use to award awards, but it sounds like the same ones that O/S editors use.

'Jes sayin.....
The closest I've come to reading any of these was a long review of the Fordlandia book, in NYRB, as I recall. What a story! Epic fail in the jungle: ungrateful peasants, "suburbs" in a clearing entwined with vines, determined self-deception.

Two of these now go on the never-ending list of "my next books". Thanks!
YAWN. Nothing looked interesting enough to bother to read. Sorry.
Never heard of any of them. Not a one.
wow. Fordlandia is the only one I have heard of on the nonfiction list. I am usually way more informed, too. But listening to an interview with the author of Fordlandia on NPR I was fascinated. I am betting it will win.
I was so hoping to see your name, Dave. Haven't read or heard of any of them either. But, I'll definitely have to check them out.

Still trying to work on our schedule to see if we can make it down to Austin. Halloween in Austin - not a bad place to be!
I've read "Following the Water" and thought it was lovely, although not ... hmm, what am I trying to say? It's the latest generation in a long lineage, a tradition I happen to love but nonetheless nothing groundbreaking.

I'd have voted for you.
I must say this: Sean B. Carroll, Remarkable Creatures: Epic Adventures in the Search for the Origins of Species (Houghton Mifflin Harcourt) looks pretty damn good. Going on my must-read list.