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OverviewOften called the ""American Nobel,"" the Neustadt Prize has been a marker of the state of international literature since its conception in 1969. This book is coming out in conjunction with the fiftieth anniversary, and with the reception event for the 25th Neustadt Prize (for Albanian novelist, poet, and playwright Ismail Kadare). As the prize is housed at the University of Oklahoma and World Literature Today, extra promotion will occur with those institutions. In addition, this book includes original illustrated portraits of each prizewinning author at the beginning of each chapter. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Daniel SimonPublisher: Deep Vellum Publishing Imprint: Deep Vellum Publishing ISBN: 9781646050338ISBN 10: 1646050339 Pages: 352 Publication Date: 03 December 2020 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Temporarily unavailable ![]() The supplier advises that this item is temporarily unavailable. It will be ordered for you and placed on backorder. Once it does come back in stock, we will ship it out to you. Table of ContentsReviewsLike the prize itself, this volume is a tribute and a testament to literature, and a reward for readers. -Publishers Weekly Honorees have included Gabriel Garcia Marquez, Elizabeth Bishop, Tomas Transtroemer, David Malouf, Claribel Alegria, and Dubravka Ugresic, with obvious attention to a diverse body of writers from many traditions and ethnicities. Many of those writers have faced political repression at home... The enchanters gathered in this volume all merit our attention. A welcome anthology for readers of world letters. -Kirkus Reviews If there is a single mode that operates across all the Dispatches, it is praise: praise for the authors; praise for the Neustadt family; praise for Norman, Oklahoma, where the prize is based; praise for the University of Oklahoma and WLT, the auspices under which the prize is awarded; and praise for the world of letters as such, frequently cast as an oppositional force to more political world affairs, even for this most 'apolitical' of prizes. -Jan Steyn, professor of Literary Translation and French at The University of Iowa Like the prize itself, this volume is a tribute and a testament to literature, and a reward for readers. -Lit Hub We are happy that, from a place so distant from the major cultural metropoles as Norman, Oklahoma, a place that exists not only in Kafka's America, renowned authors have been recognized and awarded a literary prize that has attained such consolidated and well-deserved international standing. As we know, few literary awards in the world have kept their prestige intact. The Neustadt Prize is undoubtedly one of them, hence its value and significance. -Latin American Literature Today LONGLISTED for Reading the West Book Award “Like the prize itself, this volume is a tribute and a testament to literature, and a reward for readers.” —Publishers Weekly ""Honorees have included Gabriel García Márquez, Elizabeth Bishop, Tomas Tranströmer, David Malouf, Claribel Alegría, and Dubravka Ugrešić, with obvious attention to a diverse body of writers from many traditions and ethnicities. Many of those writers have faced political repression at home... The enchanters gathered in this volume all merit our attention. A welcome anthology for readers of world letters."" —Kirkus Reviews ""If there is a single mode that operates across all the Dispatches, it is praise: praise for the authors; praise for the Neustadt family; praise for Norman, Oklahoma, where the prize is based; praise for the University of Oklahoma and WLT, the auspices under which the prize is awarded; and praise for the world of letters as such, frequently cast as an oppositional force to more political world affairs, even for this most 'apolitical' of prizes."" —Jan Steyn, professor of Literary Translation and French at The University of Iowa ""Like the prize itself, this volume is a tribute and a testament to literature, and a reward for readers.”—Lit Hub ""We are happy that, from a place so distant from the major cultural metropoles as Norman, Oklahoma, a place that exists not only in Kafka's America, renowned authors have been recognized and awarded a literary prize that has attained such consolidated and well-deserved international standing. As we know, few literary awards in the world have kept their prestige intact. The Neustadt Prize is undoubtedly one of them, hence its value and significance.” —Latin American Literature Today “[Dispatches from the Republic of Letters] is conversation of the highest order… If we hope to gain some insight about the true state of the nation’s soul, we might consider how these writers stared into different abysses in their own countries and produced imaginative works that see all too clearly.” — Christopher Merrill, Los Angeles Review of Books Like the prize itself, this volume is a tribute and a testament to literature, and a reward for readers. -Publishers Weekly Honorees have included Gabriel Garcia Marquez, Elizabeth Bishop, Tomas Transtroemer, David Malouf, Claribel Alegria, and Dubravka Ugresic, with obvious attention to a diverse body of writers from many traditions and ethnicities. Many of those writers have faced political repression at home... The enchanters gathered in this volume all merit our attention. A welcome anthology for readers of world letters. -Kirkus Reviews If there is a single mode that operates across all the Dispatches, it is praise: praise for the authors; praise for the Neustadt family; praise for Norman, Oklahoma, where the prize is based; praise for the University of Oklahoma and WLT, the auspices under which the prize is awarded; and praise for the world of letters as such, frequently cast as an oppositional force to more political world affairs, even for this most 'apolitical' of prizes. -Jan Steyn, professor of Literary Translation and French at The University of Iowa Like the prize itself, this volume is a tribute and a testament to literature, and a reward for readers. -Publishers Weekly Honorees have included Gabriel Garcia Marquez, Elizabeth Bishop, Tomas Transtroemer, David Malouf, Claribel Alegria, and Dubravka Ugresic, with obvious attention to a diverse body of writers from many traditions and ethnicities. Many of those writers have faced political repression at home... The enchanters gathered in this volume all merit our attention. A welcome anthology for readers of world letters. -Kirkus Reviews If there is a single mode that operates across all the Dispatches, it is praise: praise for the authors; praise for the Neustadt family; praise for Norman, Oklahoma, where the prize is based; praise for the University of Oklahoma and WLT, the auspices under which the prize is awarded; and praise for the world of letters as such, frequently cast as an oppositional force to more political world affairs, even for this most 'apolitical' of prizes. -Jan Steyn, professor of Literary Translation and French at The University of Iowa Like the prize itself, this volume is a tribute and a testament to literature, and a reward for readers. -Lit Hub We are happy that, from a place so distant from the major cultural metropoles as Norman, Oklahoma, a place that exists not only in Kafka's America, renowned authors have been recognized and awarded a literary prize that has attained such consolidated and well-deserved international standing. As we know, few literary awards in the world have kept their prestige intact. The Neustadt Prize is undoubtedly one of them, hence its value and significance. -Latin American Literature Today [Dispatches from the Republic of Letters] is conversation of the highest order... If we hope to gain some insight about the true state of the nation's soul, we might consider how these writers stared into different abysses in their own countries and produced imaginative works that see all too clearly. - Christopher Merrill, Los Angeles Review of Books Like the prize itself, this volume is a tribute and a testament to literature, and a reward for readers. - Publisher's Weekly LONGLISTED for Reading the West Book Award Like the prize itself, this volume is a tribute and a testament to literature, and a reward for readers. -Publishers Weekly Honorees have included Gabriel Garcia Marquez, Elizabeth Bishop, Tomas Transtroemer, David Malouf, Claribel Alegria, and Dubravka Ugresic, with obvious attention to a diverse body of writers from many traditions and ethnicities. Many of those writers have faced political repression at home... The enchanters gathered in this volume all merit our attention. A welcome anthology for readers of world letters. -Kirkus Reviews If there is a single mode that operates across all the Dispatches, it is praise: praise for the authors; praise for the Neustadt family; praise for Norman, Oklahoma, where the prize is based; praise for the University of Oklahoma and WLT, the auspices under which the prize is awarded; and praise for the world of letters as such, frequently cast as an oppositional force to more political world affairs, even for this most 'apolitical' of prizes. -Jan Steyn, professor of Literary Translation and French at The University of Iowa Like the prize itself, this volume is a tribute and a testament to literature, and a reward for readers. -Lit Hub We are happy that, from a place so distant from the major cultural metropoles as Norman, Oklahoma, a place that exists not only in Kafka's America, renowned authors have been recognized and awarded a literary prize that has attained such consolidated and well-deserved international standing. As we know, few literary awards in the world have kept their prestige intact. The Neustadt Prize is undoubtedly one of them, hence its value and significance. -Latin American Literature Today [Dispatches from the Republic of Letters] is conversation of the highest order... If we hope to gain some insight about the true state of the nation's soul, we might consider how these writers stared into different abysses in their own countries and produced imaginative works that see all too clearly. - Christopher Merrill, Los Angeles Review of Books Author InformationDaniel Simon serves as World Literature Today's assistant director and editor in chief. He teaches for the Department of English at the University of Oklahoma. In addition, he is a poet, translator, and member of the Academy of American poets; his poetry collections have been translated into multiple languages. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |