Close Menu
Animorphs Central – Your Ultimate Animorphs & Sci-Fi Fan HubAnimorphs Central – Your Ultimate Animorphs & Sci-Fi Fan Hub
    What's Hot

    Sword Art Online Franchise Gets New Original Film – News

    April 29, 2026

    Crunchyroll Sets ‘The Other World’s Books Depend on the Bean Counter’ Anime English Dub Staff, Cast, & Premiere

    April 29, 2026

    How to solve Rathma’s puzzle in Diablo 4

    April 29, 2026
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    Animorphs Central – Your Ultimate Animorphs & Sci-Fi Fan HubAnimorphs Central – Your Ultimate Animorphs & Sci-Fi Fan Hub
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    • Home
    • Art
    • Manga
    • Books
    • Fandom
    • Reviews
    • Theories
    • Characters
    • GraphicNovels
    Animorphs Central – Your Ultimate Animorphs & Sci-Fi Fan HubAnimorphs Central – Your Ultimate Animorphs & Sci-Fi Fan Hub
    Home»Books»Amy Tan, Ekow Eshun and Michael Connelly among L.A. Times Book Prize honorees and finalists
    Books

    Amy Tan, Ekow Eshun and Michael Connelly among L.A. Times Book Prize honorees and finalists

    By February 18, 2026No Comments7 Mins Read
    Share Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Telegram Email Copy Link
    Follow Us
    Google News Flipboard
    LA Times
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

    Authors Amy Tan, from left, Ekow Eshun and Michael Connelly. (Michael Loccisano / Getty Images; Zeinab Batchelor; Katherine K. Westerman)

    Finalists and honorees for the 46th Los Angeles Times Book Prizes were announced Wednesday.

    Writer-curator Ekow Eshun is among the biography finalists for “The Strangers: Five Extraordinary Black Men and the Worlds That Made Them,” which parses Black masculinity as embodied by various civil rights activists, philosophers and other visionaries. Contenders in the fiction categories ranged from seasoned novelists like Michael Connelly to breakouts including Saou Ichikawa, whose debut novel, “Hunchback,” was longlisted for the 2025 International Booker Prize.

    Many selected books evoke the greatest anxieties of our time, from government-sanctioned historical revisionism to the ongoing proliferation of AI.

    “The Joy Luck Club” author Amy Tan will be honored with this year’s Robert Kirsch Award for lifetime achievement. Nonprofit We Need Diverse Books and novelist Adam Ross will receive the Innovator’s Award and Christopher Isherwood Prize for Autobiographical Prose, respectively.

    Winners in the remaining categories will be revealed at the 46th L.A. Times Book Prizes on April 17 at USC’s Bovard Auditorium. The ceremony is a prelude to the annual L.A. Times Festival of Books, which this year runs April 18-19.

    Read more:Andrew Garfield, Percival Everett and Attica Locke among L.A. Times Book Prize finalists

    The Oakland-born Tan will be given the marquee Robert Kirsch Award, which celebrates literature with regional and thematic connections to the Western United States, for her highly awarded body of work exploring multicultural identity and its complex effects on familial bonds.

    “Throughout her extraordinary career, Amy Tan has transformed American literature by shining a light on the emotional complexities of family, identity and cultural inheritance,” said Times senior editor for Books Sophia Kercher. “Her work confronts the social and cultural legacies of the American West with rich details of the immigrant experience.”

    Tan’s 1989 debut novel, “The Joy Luck Club,” which interweaves the stories of four Chinese immigrant mothers and their American-born daughters in San Francisco, is a staple of the modern literary canon and was previously a finalist for the National Book Award and the National Book Critics Circle Award. “The Joy Luck Club,” along with the essays, memoirs and novels Tan has since penned — most recently 2024’s “The Backyard Bird Chronicles” — have also led her to be inducted into the American Academy of Arts and Letters and earned her a National Humanities Medal from President Biden.

    Read more:Amy Tan journeys from novelist to naturalist without leaving her backyard

    We Need Diverse Books, a viral 2014 Twitter campaign turned nonprofit, is being honored with the Innovator’s Award for its efforts toward promoting diversity and inclusion in children’s and young adult publishing.

    According to the WNDB website, upon the nonprofit’s launch more than a decade ago, only 8% of children’s books published in the U.S. were written by authors of color. In 2023, that figure rose to 47%, in no small part due to WNDB’s grants, library partnerships and other advocacy work, per the Cooperative Children’s Book Center at the University of Wisconsin-Madison.

    “We Need Diverse Books has played an important role in publishing by championing stories that reflect our world, and opening doors for writers and readers,” said Times Executive Editor Terry Tang. “We are thrilled to recognize them with this year’s Innovator’s Award, honoring their unwavering commitment to access and representation in literature.”

    Ross rounds out the L.A. Times Book Prize honorees as the winner of the Christopher Isherwood Prize for “Playworld,” a semi-autobiographical novel about a teen growing up in 1980s New York that is described as “less a bildungsroman than a story of miseducation.”

    Read more:A trip back to the ’80s, with the feel of a more innocent age, whatever the reality

    In addition to the achievement awards, the Book Prizes recognize titles in 13 categories: audiobooks, autobiographical prose (the Christopher Isherwood Prize), biography, current interest, fiction, first fiction (the Art Seidenbaum Award), graphic novel/comics, history, mystery/thriller, poetry, science fiction, science and technology and young adult literature. Each category’s finalists and winners are chosen by panels of writers specializing in that genre.

    For more information about the Book Prizes, including the complete list of finalists, visit latimes.com/BookPrizes.

    Robert Kirsch Award

    Amy Tan

    Innovator’s Award

    We Need Diverse Books

    The Christopher Isherwood Prize for Autobiographical Prose

    Adam Ross, “Playworld: A Novel”

    The Art Seidenbaum Award for First Fiction

    Andy Anderegg, “Plum”

    Krystelle Bamford, “Idle Grounds: A Novel”

    Addie E. Citchens, “Dominion: A Novel”

    Justin Haynes, “Ibis: A Novel”

    Saou Ichikawa translated by Polly Barton, “Hunchback: A Novel”

    Achievement in Audiobook Production, presented by Audible

    Molly Jong-Fast (narrator), Matie Argiropoulos (producer); “How to Lose Your Mother”

    Jason Mott, Ronald Peet, and JD Jackson (narrators), Diane McKiernan (producer); “People Like Us: A Novel”

    James Aaron Oh (narrator), Linda Korn (producer); “The Emperor of Gladness: A Novel”

    Imani Perry (narrator), Suzanne Mitchell (producer); “Black in Blues”

    Maggi-Meg Reed, Jane Oppenheimer, Carly Robins, Jeff Ebner, David Pittu, Chris Andrew Ciulla, Mark Bramhall, Petrea Burchard, Robert Petkoff, Kimberly Farr, Cerris Morgan-Moyer, Peter Ganim, Jade Wheeler, Steve West, and Jim Seybert (narrators), Kelly Gildea (producer); “The Correspondent: A Novel”

    Biography

    Joe Dunthorne, “Children of Radium: A Buried Inheritance”

    Ekow Eshun, “The Strangers: Five Extraordinary Black Men and the Worlds That Made Them”

    Ruth Franklin, “The Many Lives of Anne Frank”

    Beth Macy, “Paper Girl: A Memoir of Home and Family in a Fractured America”

    Amanda Vaill, “Pride and Pleasure: The Schuyler Sisters in an Age of Revolution”

    Current Interest

    Jeanne Carstensen, “A Greek Tragedy: One Day, a Deadly Shipwreck, and the Human Cost of the Refugee Crisis”

    Stefan Fatsis, “Unabridged: The Thrill of (and Threat to) the Modern Dictionary”

    Brian Goldstone, “There Is No Place for Us: Working and Homeless in America”

    Gardiner Harris, “No More Tears: The Dark Secrets of Johnson & Johnson”

    Jordan Thomas, “When It All Burns: Fighting Fire in a Transformed World”

    Fiction

    Tod Goldberg, “Only Way Out: A Novel”

    Stephen Graham Jones, “The Buffalo Hunter Hunter”

    Mia McKenzie, “These Heathens: A Novel”

    Andrés Felipe Solano translated by Will Vanderhyden, “Gloria: A Novel”

    Bryan Washington, “Palaver: A Novel”

    Graphic Novel/Comics

    Eagle Valiant Brosi, “Black Cohosh”

    Jaime Hernandez, “Life Drawing: A Love and Rockets Collection”

    Michael D. Kennedy, “Milk White Steed”

    Lee Lai, “Cannon”

    Carol Tyler, “The Ephemerata: Shaping the Exquisite Nature of Grief”

    History

    Char Adams, “Black-Owned: The Revolutionary Life of the Black Bookstore”

    Bench Ansfield, “Born in Flames: The Business of Arson and the Remaking of the American City”

    Jennifer Clapp, “Titans of Industrial Agriculture: How a Few Giant Corporations Came to Dominate the Farm Sector and Why It Matters”

    Eli Erlick, “Before Gender: Lost Stories from Trans History, 1850-1950”

    Aaron G. Fountain Jr., “High School Students Unite!: Teen Activism, Education Reform, and FBI Surveillance in Postwar America”

    Mystery/Thriller

    Megan Abbott, “El Dorado Drive”

    Ace Atkins, “Everybody Wants to Rule the World: A Novel”

    Lou Berney, “Crooks: A Novel About Crime and Family”

    Michael Connelly, “The Proving Ground: A Lincoln Lawyer Novel”

    S.A. Cosby, “King of Ashes: A Novel”

    Poetry

    Gabrielle Calvocoressi, “The New Economy”

    Chet’la Sebree, “Blue Opening: Poems”

    Richard Siken, “I Do Know Some Things”

    Devon Walker-Figueroa, “Lazarus Species: Poems”

    Allison Benis White, “A Magnificent Loneliness”

    Science Fiction, Fantasy & Speculative Fiction

    Stephen Graham Jones, “The Buffalo Hunter Hunter”

    Jordan Kurella, “The Death of Mountains”

    Nnedi Okorafor, “Death of the Author: A Novel”

    Adam Oyebanji, “Esperance”

    Silvia Park, “Luminous: A Novel”

    Science & Technology

    Mariah Blake, “They Poisoned the World: Life and Death in the Age of Forever Chemicals”

    Peter Brannen, “The Story of CO2 Is the Story of Everything: How Carbon Dioxide Made Our World”

    Karen Hao, “Empire of AI: Dreams and Nightmares in Sam Altman’s OpenAI”

    Laura Poppick, “Strata: Stories from Deep Time”

    Jordan Thomas, “When It All Burns: Fighting Fire in a Transformed World”

    Young Adult Literature

    K. Ancrum, “The Corruption of Hollis Brown”

    Idris Goodwin, “King of the Neuro Verse”

    Jamie Jo Hoang, “My Mother, the Mermaid Chaser”

    Trung Le Nguyen, “Angelica and the Bear Prince”

    Hannah V. Sawyerr, “Truth Is: A Novel in Verse”

    Get the latest book news, events and more.

    This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.

    among Amy Book Connelly Ekow Eshun Finalists honorees L.A Michael Prize Tan Times
    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email

      Related Posts

      Take-Two CEO Talks Grand Theft Auto 6 Price, and the Possibility for More L.A. Noire

      April 29, 2026

      Neverness to Everness release date and launch times

      April 29, 2026

      ‘The Family Biz’ by Alan Orloff

      April 28, 2026
      Add A Comment
      Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

      Economy News

      Sword Art Online Franchise Gets New Original Film – News

      By April 29, 2026

      More details to come in July The Sword Art Online franchise’s “Yuna First Live” concert…

      Crunchyroll Sets ‘The Other World’s Books Depend on the Bean Counter’ Anime English Dub Staff, Cast, & Premiere

      April 29, 2026

      How to solve Rathma’s puzzle in Diablo 4

      April 29, 2026
      Top Trending

      Hallway Minus Yeet: Animorphs Book 47

      By animorphscentralJanuary 26, 2026

      Joseph here, yes I know that Book 47 is titled “The Resistance”.…

      Brooklyn Museum’s Latest Exhibition Blends Art, Fashion And Science

      By animorphscentralJanuary 26, 2026

      Brooklyn, NY, USA – May 1 2024: The entrance to the Brooklyn…

      Billionaire Adam Weitsman Acquires A Rare Nakamigos NFT

      By animorphscentralJanuary 26, 2026

      Join Our Telegram channel to stay up to date on breaking news…

      Subscribe to News

      Get the latest sports news from NewsSite about world, sports and politics.

      About us

      Welcome to Animorphs Central, a fan-focused website dedicated to the world of Animorphs and science fiction storytelling.

      Animorphs Central was created for fans who love exploring alien species, epic battles, unforgettable characters, and the deeper lore of the Animorphs universe.

      Hallway Minus Yeet: Animorphs Book 47

      January 26, 2026

      Brooklyn Museum’s Latest Exhibition Blends Art, Fashion And Science

      January 26, 2026

      Billionaire Adam Weitsman Acquires A Rare Nakamigos NFT

      January 26, 2026

      Subscribe to Updates

      Get the latest creative news from FooBar about art, design and business.

      Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest
      • About Us
      • Disclaimer
      • Get In Touch
      • Privacy Policy
      • Terms and Conditions
      © 2026 animorphscentral.blog. Designed by Pro.

      Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.