2022 Winners

The Andrew Carnegie Medals for Excellence in Fiction and Nonfiction longlist is out - a total of 45 books (23 fiction, 22 nonfiction) made the list for 2022. The six-title shortlist—three each for the fiction and nonfiction medals—will be chosen from longlist titles and announced on November 8, 2021. The celebratory event, including presentations by the winners and a featured speaker, will take place at the 2022 Annual Conference in June 2022 in Washington, D.C. Share your favorite Andrew Carnegie Medal longlist titles on social media using the #_Carnegie hashtag!

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Andrew Carnegie Medals for Excellence in Fiction and Nonfiction

FICTION WINNER

Tom Lin

The Thousand Crimes of Ming Tsu

(Little, Brown and Company, a division of Hachette Book Group)

In Utah, in 1869, Ming Tsu reckons he has killed some 200 men and is now on his way to killing the five who had beaten him half to death, stolen his wife, and had him sentenced to 10 years of forced labor building the Central Pacific Railroad. Two years later, Ming has escaped and is ready for retribution. Infused with magic realism, Lin’s beautifully imagined first novel is a transcendent epic.

NONFICTION WINNER

Hanif Abdurraqib

A Little Devil in America: In Praise of Black Performance

(Random House, a division of Penguin Random House LLC)

Blending pop-culture essays, memoir, and poetry, Abdurraqib delves into the many iterations of Black artistic expression through an often deeply personal lens. Divided into five “movements,” these pieces offer an expansive exploration of subjects ranging from the often-tragic lives of legendary Black artists to close examination of a singular performance.

SHORTLIST

FICTION FINALISTS

Twitter share: Andrew Carnegie Medal for Excellence in Fiction Shortlist Selection (The Five Wounds) Winners announced January 23!



Kirstin Valdez Quade

(W. W. Norton & Company)

Amadeo Padilla filled the role of Jesus during the re-creation of the Crucifixion as part of Holy Week, and he also has heavy burdens to bear in his real life in Las Penas, New Mexico, with his pregnant teen daughter, Angel and an ailing matriarch. Quade delivers a nuanced and authentic tale of characters who understand the inevitability of fate but try to forge ahead anyway in the hope of breaking free.





Lauren Groff

(Riverhead Books, an imprint of Penguin Random House LLC)

In the twelfth century, Marie, former child crusader and “bastardess heir to the crown” of France and England, at age 17, considered unmarriageable due to her great height and plainness, arrives at the dismal abbey that she will eventually transform as abbess over the course of Groff’s splendidly daring, descriptive and spine-tingling novel of faith, power and temptation.

Twitter share: Andrew Carnegie Medal for Excellence in Fiction Shortlist Selection (Book cover: The Thousand Crimes of MIng Tsu) Winners announced January 23!



Tom Lin


(Little, Brown and Company, a division of Hachette Book Group)

In Utah, in 1869, Ming Tsu reckons he has killed some 200 men and is now on his way to killing the five who had beaten him half to death, stolen his wife, and had him sentenced to 10 years of forced labor building the Central Pacific Railroad. Two years later, Ming has escaped and is ready for retribution. Infused with magic realism, Lin’s beautifully imagined first novel is a transcendent epic.

NONFICTION FINALISTS

Twitter share: Andrew Carnegie Medal for Excellence in Nonfiction Shortlist Selection (Book cover: Four Hundred Souls: A Community History of African America, 1619–2019) Winners announced January 23!



Ibram X. Kendi and Keisha N. Blain

(One World, an imprint of Penguin Random House LLC)

African American history is a communal quilt, crisscrossed with the stitches of elders, youth, LGBTQ folk, mothers, fathers, revolutionaries, and poets. Editors Kendi and Blain honor this multilayered heritage in a monumental work of collaborative history. Ninety Black writers each take on a five-year period from 1619–2019, and each 40-year section concludes with a poem adding up to a seamless collection that crackles with rage, beauty, bitter humor, and the indomitable will to survive.

Twitter share: Andrew Carnegie Medal for Excellence in Nonfiction Shortlist Selection (Book cover: A Little Devil in America: Notes in Praise of Black Performance ) Winners announced January 23!



Hanif Abdurraqib

(Random House, a division of Penguin Random House LLC)

Blending pop-culture essays, memoir, and poetry, Abdurraqib delves into the many iterations of Black artistic expression through an often deeply personal lens. Divided into five “movements,” these pieces offer an expansive exploration of subjects ranging from the often-tragic lives of legendary Black artists to close examination of a singular performance. Startling, layered and timely, this is an essential, illuminating collection.

Twitter share: Andrew Carnegie Medal for Excellence in Nonfiction Shortlist Selection (Book cover: Seek You: A Journey through American Loneliness) Winners announced January 23!

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Kristen Radtke

(Pantheon Books, a division of Penguin Random House LLC)

Radtke examines isolation as a social, biological, and personal phenomenon in a graphic-essay style, centering her inquiry around four human behaviors—listen, watch, click and touching—and considering television, American “loners,” social media, and the need for touch in prose and vector-drawn illustrations, rendering contextual and emotional detail in a provocative and engaging look at loneliness.

LONGLIST


FICTION

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Cortez, Jaime.

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(Black Cat)

Doerr, Anthony.

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(Scribner)

Engel, Patricia.

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(Avid Reader)

Erdrich, Louise.

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(Harper)

Fernández, Nona.

Translated by Natasha Wimmer.

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(Graywolf)

Galgut, Damon.

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(Europa)

Gendry-Kim, Keum Suk.

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(Drawn & Quarterly)

Griner, Paul.

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(Sarabande Books)

Groff, Lauren.

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(Riverhead Books)

Harris, Nathan.

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(Little, Brown)

Ishiguro, Kazuo.

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(Knopf)

Lin, Tom.

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(Little, Brown)

McConaghy, Charlotte.

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(Flatiron)

Mott, Jason.

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(Dutton)

Murakami, Haruki.

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(Knopf)

Nguyen, Eric.

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(Knopf)

Powers, Richard.

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(Norton)

Quade, Kirstin Valdez.

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(Norton)

Sahota, Sunjeev.

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(Viking)

Shipstead, Maggie.

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(Knopf)

Slimani, Leila.

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(Penguin Books)

So, Anthony Veasna.

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(Ecco)

Ye, Chun.

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(Catapult)

NONFICTION

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Abdurraqib, Hanif.

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(Random House)

Brown, Daniel James.

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(Viking)

Dreilinger, Danielle.

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(Norton)

Dunn, Jon.

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(Basic)

Ellsworth, Scott.

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(Dutton)

Flynn, Sean.

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(Simon & Schuster)

Green, John.

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(Dutton)

Harjo, Joy.

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(Norton)

Hudes, Quiara Alegría.

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(One World)

Jobb, Dean.

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(Algonquin)

Keefer, Patrick Radden.

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(Doubleday)

Kendi, Ibram X. and Keisha N. Blain.

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(One World)

Kolbert, Elizabeth.

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(Crown)

Lee, Hermione.

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(Knopf)

Marçal, Katrine.

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(Abrams)

McGhee, Heather.

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(One World)

Meiburg, Jonathan.

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(Knopf)

Quinones, Sam.

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(Bloomsbury)

Radtke, Kristen.

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(Pantheon)

Rembert, Winfred.

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(Bloomsbury)

Roach, Mary.

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(Norton)

Ruhl, Sarah.

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(Simon & Schuster)