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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.[1] He continues to write through his final illness, his last poem being "Things I'll Not Do (Nostalgias)" written on March 30.[2]
 - 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".[3]
 
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.[4][5]
 
New books
Fiction
- Ben Aaronovitch and Kate Orman – So Vile a Sin
 - Mitch Albom – Tuesdays With Morrie
 - Martin Amis – Night Train
 - Iain Banks – A Song of Stone
 - John Banville – The Untouchable
 - Hazel Barnes – The Story I Tell Myself
 - Marie Bashkirtseff (died 1884) – I Am the Most Interesting Book of All (translation)
 - Raymond Benson
 - Jonathan Blum and Kate Orman – Vampire Science
 - Roberto Bolaño – Last Evenings on Earth (Llamadas Telefonicas)
 - Pascal Bruckner – Les Voleurs de beauté
 - Simon Bucher-Jones – Ghost Devices
 - Christopher Bulis – A Device of Death
 - Tim Burton – The Melancholy Death of Oyster Boy & Other Stories
 - Candace Bushnell – Sex and the City
 - Peter Carey – Jack Maggs
 - Caleb Carr – The Angel of Darkness
 - Agatha Christie (died 1976) – collected short stories
 - Daniel Clowes – Ghost World (graphic novel)
 - Warwick Collins – Gents
 - Bernard Cornwell
 - Patricia Cornwell
 - Paul Cornell – Oh No It Isn't!
 - Jim Crace – Quarantine
 - Robert Crais – Indigo Slam
 - Ann C. Crispin
 - 'Misha Defonseca' – Misha: A Mémoire of the Holocaust Years (published as non-fiction)
 - Don DeLillo – Underworld
 - Anita Diamant – The Red Tent
 - Terrance Dicks
 - Fernanda Eberstadt – When the Sons of Heaven Meet the Daughters of the Earth
 - Bernardine Evaristo – Lara
 - Charles Frazier – Cold Mountain
 - Anthony Frewin – London Blues
 - Anastasia Gosteva – Дочь самурая (The Samurai's Daughter)
 - John Grisham – The Partner
 - Barbara Hambly – Planet of Twilight
 - Allison Hedge Coke – Dog Road Woman
 - Matt Jones – Beyond the Sun
 - Sebastian Junger – The Perfect Storm
 - Winona LaDuke – Last Standing Woman
 - Joe R. Lansdale – Bad Chili
 - Paul Leonard – Genocide
 - Melissa Lucashenko – Steam Pigs
 - Ann-Marie MacDonald – Fall on Your Knees
 - Bernard MacLaverty – Grace Notes
 - Ian R. MacLeod – Voyages by Starlight
 - Norman Mailer – The Gospel According to the Son
 - Ian McEwan – Enduring Love
 - David A. McIntee – The Dark Path
 - Lawrence Miles
 - Mark Morris – The Bodysnatchers
 - Toni Morrison – Paradise
 - Jim Mortimore – Eternity Weeps
 - Herta Müller – The Appointment
 - Ryū Murakami (村上 龍) – In the Miso Soup (イン ザ・ミソスープ, English translation 2005)
 - Courttia Newland – The Scholar
 - Kate Orman – The Room with No Doors
 - Hanne Ørstavik – Kjærlighet (Love)
 - Lance Parkin – The Dying Days
 - James Patterson – Cat and Mouse
 - Cyril Pearl – Morisson of Peking
 - John Peel – War of the Daleks
 - Pepetela – A Gloriosa Família
 - Marc Platt – Lungbarrow
 - Terry Pratchett – Jingo
 - Annie Proulx – "Brokeback Mountain" (short story)
 - Thomas Pynchon – Mason & Dixon
 - Kathy Reichs – Déjà Dead
 - Nina Revoyr – The Necessary Hunger
 - Justin Richards – Dragons' Wrath
 - Mordecai Richler – Barney's Version
 - Gareth Roberts – The Well-Mannered War
 - Philip Roth – American Pastoral
 - Arundhati Roy – The God of Small Things
 - Don Miguel Ruiz – The Four Agreements
 - Gary Russell
 - Will Self – Great Apes
 - Carol Shields – Larry's Party[6]
 - Sidney Sheldon – The Best Laid Plans
 - Michael Stackpole – The Bacta War
 - Danielle Steel
- The Ghost
 - The Ranch
 - Special Delivery
 
 - Dave Stone
 - William Sutcliffe – Are You Experienced?
 - Antonio Tabucchi – The Missing Head of Damasceno Monteiro (La testa perduta di Damasceno Monteiro)
 - Kaoru Takamura – Redi joka (レディ・ジョーカー, Lady Joker) (book publication completed)
 - Eckhart Tolle – The Power of Now
 - Zlatko Topčić – Nightmare
 - Kurt Vonnegut – Timequake
 - Lulu Wang – Het Lelietheater (The Lily Theatre)
 - Niall Williams – Four Letters of Love
 - Connie Willis – To Say Nothing of the Dog
 - Timothy Zahn – Specter of the Past
 - Roger Zelazny and Jane Lindskold – Donnerjack
 
Children and young people
- Lloyd Alexander – The Iron Ring[7]
 - Lynne Reid Banks – Harry the Poisonous Centipede: A Story to Make You Squirm (first in the Harry the Poisonous Centipede trilogy)
 - 'Asta Bowen – Wolf: A Journey Home
 - Nancy Butts - The Door in the Lake
 - Cao Wenxuan (曹文軒) – The Grass House (草房子)
 - Sarah Ferguson – Budgie the Little Helicopter (first in an eponymous series of 5 books)
 - Mem Fox – Whoever You Are
 - Cornelia Funke – Dragon Rider
 - Virginia Hamilton (with Barry Moser) – A Ring of Tricksters: Animal Tales from America, the West Indies, and Africa
 - Mark Helprin (with Chris Van Allsburg) – The Veil of Snows
 - William Mayne – Lady Muck (illustrated by Jonathan Heale)
 - Eloise Jarvis McGraw – The Moorchild
 - Junko Morimoto – The Two Bullies
 - Barbara Nichol (with Barry Moser) – Dippers
 - Mary Pope Osborne (with Ned Bittinger) – Rocking Horse Christmas
 - Dav Pilkey – The Adventures of Captain Underpants[8] (first in the Captain Underpants series of 12 books)
 - Philip Pullman – The Subtle Knife[9]
 - Rick Riordan – Big Red Tequila
 - J. K. Rowling – Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone[10] (first book in the Harry Potter series)
 - Ron Roy – The Absent Author (first in the A to Z Mysteries series of 26 books)
 - Simms Taback – There was an Old Lady who Swallowed a Fly
 - Vivian Walsh – Olive, the Other Reindeer
 - Jacqueline Wilson – Girls in Love[11]
 
Drama
- Jon Fosse – Nightsongs
 - Lee Hall – Spoonface Steinberg (radio monologue)
 - Moisés Kaufman – Gross Indecency: The Three Trials of Oscar Wilde
 - Thomas Kilroy – The Secret Fall of Constance Wilde
 - Conor McPherson – The Weir
 - Patrick Marber – Closer
 - Richard Nelson – Goodnight Children Everywhere
 - Peter Whelan – The Herbal Bed
 
Poetry
Non-fiction
- Dave Barry – Dave Barry's Book of Bad Songs
 - Jean-Dominique Bauby – The Diving Bell and the Butterfly (Le Scaphandre et le papillon)
 - Cari Beauchamp – Without Lying Down: Frances Marion and the Powerful Women of Early Hollywood
 - Jan Bondeson – A Cabinet of Medical Curiosities
 - Bill Bryson – A Walk in the Woods
 - D. K. Chakrabarti – Colonial Indology : sociopolitics of the ancient Indian past
 - Iris Chang – The Rape of Nanking
 - Jared Diamond – Guns, Germs and Steel
 - Jenny Diski – Skating to Antarctica
 - Michael Drosnin – The Bible Code
 - Gerina Dunwich – A Wiccan's Guide to Prophecy and Divination
 - Geoff Dyer – Out of Sheer Rage: In the Shadow of D. H. Lawrence
 - Timothy Ferris – The Whole Shebang: A State-of-the-Universe(s) Report
 - Benjamin Fondane (died 1944) – Le Voyageur n'a pas fini de voyager
 - Stephen Fry – Moab Is My Washpot (autobiography)
 - Charlotte Gray – Mrs. King
 - Alan Guth – The Inflationary Universe
 - Robert Hughes – American Visions: The Epic History of Art in America
 - Jesse Lee Kercheval – Building Fiction
 - Betty Kobayashi Issenman – Sinews of Survival
 - Geneviève Lacambre – Gustave Moreau : Maître sorcier
 - B. B. Lal – The Earliest civilization of South Asia: rise, maturity, and decline
 - Peter Maas – Underboss
 - Deborah Madison – Vegetarian Cooking for Everyone
 - James McBride – The Color of Water
 - Adele Morales – The Last Party: Scenes From My Life with Norman Mailer
 - Ian Smith – The Great Betrayal
 - Alan Sokal and Jean Bricmont – Fashionable Nonsense
 - Maria Todorova – Imagining the Balkans
 - Kevin Warwick – March of the Machines[12]
 - Thierry Zéphir – Khmer: The Lost Empire of Cambodia[13]
 
Births
- February 12 – Alexander Nikolov, Bulgarian poet
 - June 22 – Aqiil Gopee, Mauritian writer and poet
 - November 28 – Franz Mherryon Robles, Filipino novelist and aphorist
 
Deaths
- January 19 – James Dickey, American poet and novelist (born 1923)[14]
 - 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)[1]
 - 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
Australia
- The Australian/Vogel Literary Award: Eva Sallis, Hiam
 - C. J. Dennis Prize for Poetry: Les Murray, Subhuman Redneck Poems
 - Kenneth Slessor Prize for Poetry: Anthony Lawrence, The Viewfinder
 - Mary Gilmore Prize: Morgan Yasbincek, Night Reversing
 - Miles Franklin Award: David Foster, The Glade Within the Grove
 
Canada
- Bronwen Wallace Memorial Award: Rachel Rose
 - Giller Prize for Canadian Fiction: Mordecai Richler, Barney's Version
 - See 1997 Governor General's Awards for a complete list of winners and finalists for those awards.
 - Edna Staebler Award for Creative Non-Fiction: Anne Mullens, Timely Death[19]
 
France
- Prix Goncourt: Patrick Rambaud, La Bataille
 - Prix Décembre: Lydie Salvayre, La Compagnie des spectres
 - Prix Médicis International: T. Coraghessan Boyle, America
 - Prix Médicis French: Les Sept Noms du peintre – Philippe Le Guillou
 
Spain
United Kingdom
- Booker Prize: Arundhati Roy, The God of Small Things
 - Carnegie Medal for children's literature: Tim Bowler, River Boy
 - James Tait Black Memorial Prize for fiction: Andrew Miller, Ingenious Pain
 - James Tait Black Memorial Prize for biography: R. F. Foster, William Butler Yeats: A Life, Volume 1 – The Apprentice Mage 1965-1914
 - Cholmondeley Award: Alison Brackenbury, Gillian Clarke, Tony Curtis, Anne Stevenson
 - Eric Gregory Award: Matthew Clegg, Sarah Corbett, Polly Clark, Tim Kendall, Graham Nelson, Matthew Welton
 - Orange Prize for Fiction: Anne Michaels, Fugitive Pieces
 - Whitbread Best Book Award: Ted Hughes, Tales from Ovid
 
United States
- Agnes Lynch Starrett Poetry Prize: Richard Blanco, City of a Hundred Fires
 - Aiken Taylor Award for Modern American Poetry: Fred Chappell
 - American Academy of Arts and Letters Gold Medal in Poetry, John Ashbery
 - Compton Crook Award: Richard Garfinkle, Celestial Matters
 - Hugo Award: Kim Stanley Robinson, Blue Mars
 - Nebula Award: Vonda McIntyre, The Moon and the Sun
 - Newbery Medal for children's literature: E. L. Konigsburg, The View from Saturday
 - Pulitzer Prize for Drama: no award given
 - Pulitzer Prize for Fiction: Steven Millhauser – Martin Dressler: The Tale of an American Dreamer
 - Pulitzer Prize for Poetry: Lisel Mueller: Alive Together: New and Selected Poems
 - Wallace Stevens Award: Anthony Hecht
 - Whiting Awards:
 
- 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
- International Dublin Literary Award: Javier Marías, A Heart So White
 - Premio Nadal: Carlos Cañeque, Quién
 
Notes
- Hahn, Daniel (2015). The Oxford Companion to Children's Literature (2nd ed.). Oxford. University Press. ISBN 9780198715542.
 
References
- 1 2 Hampton, Wilborn (April 6, 1997). "Allen Ginsberg, Master Poet Of Beat Generation, Dies at 70". New York Times. Archived from the original on March 11, 2008. Retrieved April 14, 2008.
 - ↑ Ginsberg, Allen. Collected Poems 1947–1997. pp. 1160–61.
 - ↑ "Harry Potter, 'Huckleberry Finn' among controversial". Banned books. CNN. Archived from the original on 2004-08-05.
 - ↑ Wilson, Jeff (1997-07-30). "Romance novelist Janet Dailey apologizes for plagiarism". Pittsburgh Post-Gazette.
 - ↑ Standora, Leo (1997-08-27). "Romance Writer Janet Dailey Sued". New York Daily News. Archived from the original on 2009-08-01. Retrieved 2008-11-18.
 - ↑ The Worlds of Carol Shields. University of Ottawa Press. 2014. p. 113. ISBN 9780776621869.
 - ↑ Hahn 2015, p. 14
 - ↑ Hahn 2015, p.106
 - ↑ "His Dark Materials". Oxford Reference. Retrieved 11 January 2022.
 - ↑ Hahn 2015, pp. 264-265
 - ↑ Hahn 2015, p. 631
 - ↑ Kevin Warwick (1997). March of the Machines: Why the New Race of Robots Will Rule the World. Century. ISBN 978-0-7126-7756-1.
 - ↑ "L'empire des rois khmers". livreshebdo.fr (in French). 1997. Retrieved 14 April 2022.
 - ↑ Davison, Peter (August 1, 1998). "The Burden of James Dickey". The Atlantic.
 - ↑ Owens, Irene (January 2003). "Reason, Joseph Henry". In Donald G. Davis (ed.). Dictionary of American Library Biography: Second supplement. Libraries Unlimited. pp. 182–186. ISBN 978-1-56308-868-1.
 - ↑ 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 Archived 2014-06-06 at Archive-It, Wilfrid Laurier University, Previous winners, Anne Mullens, Retrieved 11/17/2012
 
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