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National Book Award for Translated Literature

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The National Book Award for Translated Literature, is one of five annual National Book Awards in the USA, recognising outstanding literary works of translation into English and administered by the National Book Foundation. This award was previously bestowed from 1967 to 1983 but did not require the author to be living and was for works of fiction only. It was reintroduced in its current form in 2018 and is open to living translators and authors, for works of both fiction and non-fiction.[1]

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The award recognises one book published by a U.S. publisher located in the United States from December 1 of the previous year to November 30 in the award year. The original text need not have been published in the year of the award submission, only the translated work. For the Translated Literature award neither author nor translator are required to be U.S. citizens.[2]

Entries for the National Book Awards are open from March until May. A longlist of ten books is announced in September with a shortlist of five following in October. The winner is announced at a ceremony in November. The prizes are split equally between the author and the translator.[3]

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Awards

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This list only covers the current version of the National Book Award for Translated Literature from its reintroduction in 2018. Winners from 1967 to 1983 are covered in the complete list of winners of the National Book Award.

2018

The prize was judged by Karen Maeda Allman, Sinan Antoon, Susan Bernofsky, and Álvaro Enrigue and chaired by Harold Augenbraum.[4] The longlist was announced on September 12.[5] The finalists were announced October 10.[6] The winner was announced on November 14, 2018.[7]

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2019

The prize was judged by Keith Gessen, Elisabeth Jaquette, Katie Kitamura, and Shuchi Saraswat and chaired by Idra Novey.[8] The longlist was announced on September 17.[9] Finalists were announced on October 8.[10] The winner was announced on November 20, 2019.[11]

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2020

The prize was judged by Heather Cleary, John Darnielle, Anne Ishii, and Brad Johnson and chaired by Dinaw Mengestu.[12] The longlist was announced on September 16[13] with the shortlist following on October 6.[14] The winner was announced on November 18, 2020.[15]

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2021

The prize was judged by Jessie Chaffee, Sergio de la Pava, Madhu H. Kaza, and Achy Obejas and chaired by Stephen Snyder.[16] The longlist was announced on September 15[17] with the shortlist following on October 5.[18] The winner was announced on November 17, 2021.[19]

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2022

The prize was judged by Nick Buzanski, Veronica Esposito, Ann Goldstein (Chair), Rohan Kamicheril, and Russell Scott Valentino.[21] The longlist was announced on September 14[22] with the shortlist following on October 4.[23] The winner was announced on November 16, 2022.[24]

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2023

Members of the prize jury were Geoffrey Brock, Arthur Malcolm Dixon, Cristina Rodriguez, T. Denean Sharpley-Whiting, and Jeremy Tiang (Chair).[25] The longlist was announced on September 13[26] with the shortlist following on October 4.[27] The winner was announced on November 16, 2023.[28]

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2024

Members of the prize jury were Aron Aji, Jennifer Croft, Jhumpa Lahiri (Chair), Gary Lovely and Julia Sanches.[29] The longlist was announced on September 13[30] with the shortlist following on October 1.[31] The winner was announced on November 20, 2024.[32]

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