1979 in literature
Appearance
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This article presents lists of the literary events and publications in 1979.
Events
- April 13 – The Adventure of Sudsakorn, the only cel-animated feature film ever made in Thailand, is released to cinemas. It is based on Phra Aphai Mani, a 30,000-line epic written by Thailand's best-known poet, Sunthorn Phu.[1]
- May – Première of the Merchant Ivory Productions film The Europeans with screenplay by Ruth Prawer Jhabvala based on Henry James' novel The Europeans (1878).
- October 25 – The London Review of Books is first published by founding editors Karl Miller, Mary-Kay Wilmers and Susannah Clapp; for its first six months it appears as an insert to The New York Review of Books.[2]
- K. W. Jeter's novel Morlock Night pioneers full-length fiction in the genre he will later call steampunk.
- August Wilson's Jitney is first produced; it will become the eighth of his "Pittsburgh Cycle".
New books
Fiction
- Douglas Adams – The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy
- V. C. Andrews – Flowers in the Attic
- Jeffrey Archer – Kane and Abel
- Barbara Taylor Bradford – A Woman of Substance
- Octavia Butler – Kindred
- Italo Calvino — If on a winter's night a traveler
- Orson Scott Card – A Planet Called Treason
- Angela Carter – The Bloody Chamber
- Agatha Christie – Miss Marple's Final Cases and Two Other Stories
- L. Sprague de Camp and Lin Carter – Conan the Liberator
- Mahmoud Dowlatabadi – Missing Soluch (Template:Lang-fa, Ja-ye Khali-ye Soluch)
- Michael Ende – The Neverending Story (Die unendliche Geschichte)
- José Pablo Feinmann – Últimos días de la víctima
- Thomas Flanagan — Year of the French
- Alan Dean Foster – Alien (movie novelization)
- Carlo Fruttero and Franco Lucentini — A che punto è la notte
- William Golding – Darkness Visible
- William Goldman – Tinsel
- Nadine Gordimer – Burger's Daughter
- Arthur Hailey – Overload
- Maarten 't Hart — De aansprekers
- Douglas Hill – Galactic Warlord
- Sian James – A Small Country
- Philippe Jullian – Montmartre
- Stephen King – The Dead Zone
- Russell Kirk – The Princess of All Lands
- Lina Kostenko – Marusia Churai
- Milan Kundera – The Book of Laughter and Forgetting (first published in French as Le Livre du rire et de l'oubli)
- John le Carré – Smiley's People
- Ursula K. Le Guin – A Wizard of Earthsea
- Morgan Llywelyn – Lion of Ireland: The Legend of Brian Boru
- Robert Ludlum – The Matarese Circle
- Norman Mailer – The Executioner's Song
- Dambudzo Marechera – The House of Hunger
- Haruki Murakami (村上 春樹) – Hear the Wind Sing (風の歌を聴け, Kaze no Uta o Kike)
- V. S. Naipaul – A Bend in the River
- Ellis Peters – One Corpse Too Many
- Daniel Pinkwater – Yobgorgle: Mystery Monster of Lake Ontario
- Jerry Pournelle – Janissaries
- Satyajit Ray – Hatyapuri
- Harold Robbins – Memories of Another Day
- Philip Roth – The Ghost Writer
- Mary Stewart – The Last Enchantment
- Peter Straub – Ghost Story
- William Styron – Sophie's Choice
- Trevanian – Shibumi
- Kaari Utrio – Rautalilja
- Jack Vance – The Face
- Kurt Vonnegut – Jailbird
- Elizabeth Walter – In the Mist and Other Uncanny Encounters
- William Wharton – Birdy
- Kit Williams – Masquerade
- Raymond Williams – The Fight for Manod
- Robert Anton Wilson – Schrodinger's Cat
- Tom Wolfe – The Right Stuff
- Roger Zelazny – Roadmarks
Children and young adults
- Raymond Briggs – Fungus the Bogeyman
- Roald Dahl – The Twits
- Elizabeth Laird – Rosy's Garden
- Ellen Raskin – The Westing Game
- Barbara Sleigh – Carbonel and Calidor
Drama
- Caryl Churchill – Cloud Nine
- David Fennario – Balconville
- Richard Harris – Outside Edge
- Elfriede Jelinek – Was geschah, nachdem Nora ihren Mann verlassen hatte; oder Stützen der Gesellschaften
- Peter Shaffer – Amadeus
- Sam Shepard – Buried Child
- Tom Stoppard – Undiscovered Country[3]
Poetry
Non-fiction
- David Attenborough – Life on Earth
- L. Sprague de Camp, editor – The Blade of Conan
- Elizabeth Eisenstein – The Printing Press as an Agent of Change
- John Fowles – The Tree
- Sandra Gilbert and Susan Gubar – The Madwoman in the Attic: The Woman Writer and the Nineteenth-Century Literary Imagination
- Douglas Hofstadter – Gödel, Escher, Bach: An Eternal Golden Braid
- Henry Kissinger – The White House Years
- Leon Litwack – Been in the Storm So Long: The Aftermath of Slavery
- Jean-François Lyotard – The Postmodern Condition: A Report on Knowledge (La condition postmoderne: rapport sur le savoir)
- Stephen Pile – The Book of Heroic Failures
- Clark Ashton Smith – The Black Book of Clark Ashton Smith
- Margaret Trudeau – Beyond Reason
Births
- February 10 – Johan Harstad, Norwegian novelist[4]
- March 28 – Benjamin Percy, American short story writer
- June 28 – Florian Zeller, French novelist and dramatist
- Unknown dates
- D.D. Johnston, Scottish political novelist and university lecturer
- Emily St. John Mandel, Canadian-born novelist
Deaths
- January – Dilys Cadwaladr, Welsh-language poet (born 1902)
- January 27 – Victoria Ocampo, Argentine publisher, writer and critic (born 1890)
- February 9 – Allen Tate, American poet and essayist (born 1899)
- February 25 – John L. Wasserman, American entertainment critic (car accident, born 1938)
- February 27 – Sir George Clark, English historian (born 1890)
- March 26 – Jean Stafford, American short story writer and novelist (heart failure, born 1915)
- April 8 – Breece D'J Pancake, American short story writer (suicide, born 1952)
- May 10 – J. B. Morton ("Beachcomber") English comic newspaper columnist (born 1893)
- May 14 – Jean Rhys, Dominica, West Indies-born English novelist (born 1890)
- June 3 – Arno Schmidt, German novelist (born 1914)
- June 7 – Forrest Carter, American genre novelist (heart failure, born 1925)
- July 6 – Malcolm Hulke, English TV writer (born 1924)
- July 21 – Eugène Vinaver, Russian-born English literary scholar (born 1899)
- July 23 – Joseph Kessel, French journalist and novelist (born 1898)
- July 29 – Herbert Marcuse, German Jewish philosopher (born 1898)
- August 8 – Nicholas Monsarrat, English novelist (born 1910)
- August 16 – Jerzy Jurandot (Jerzy Glejgewicht), Polish poet and dramatist (born 1911)
- September 25 – Zhou Libo (周立波), Chinese novelist and translator (born 1908)
- October 6 – Elizabeth Bishop, American poet (born 1911)
- October 17 – S. J. Perelman, American humorist (born 1904)
- October 18 – Virgilio Piñera, Cuban poet and short-story writer (born 1912)
- December 12 – Goronwy Rees, Welsh journalist and academic (born 1909)
- December 19 – Donald Creighton, Canadian historian (born 1902)
Awards
Canada
- See 1979 Governor General's Awards for a complete list of winners and finalists for those awards.
France
- Prix Goncourt:
- Prix Médicis French:
- Prix Médicis International:
Spain
United Kingdom
- Booker Prize: Penelope Fitzgerald, Offshore
- Carnegie Medal for children's literature: Peter Dickinson, Tulku
- Cholmondeley Award:
- James Tait Black Memorial Prize for fiction: William Golding, Darkness Visible
- James Tait Black Memorial Prize for biography: Brian Finney, Christopher Isherwood: A Critical Biography
United States
- American Academy of Arts and Letters Gold Medal for Fiction :
- Nebula Award: Vonda N. McIntyre, Dreamsnake
- Newbery Medal for children's literature:
- Pulitzer Prize for Drama:
- Pulitzer Prize for Fiction: John Cheever, The Stories of John Cheever
- Pulitzer Prize for Poetry:
Elsewhere
- Miles Franklin Award: David Ireland, A Woman of the Future
- Premio Nadal: Carlos Rojas, El ingenioso hidalgo y poeta Federico García Lorca asciende a los infiernos
- Viareggio Prize: Giorgio Manganelli, Centuria
References
- ^ Danutra, Pattara; Himes, Robert (2004-01-01). "Payut Ngaokrachang: The Master of Thai Animations".
- ^ Grimes, William (2011-06-20). "A. Whitney Ellsworth, First Publisher of New York Review, Dies at 75". The New York Times. Retrieved 2011-06-20.
- ^ Stoppard plays at http://www.doollee.com/PlaywrightsS/stoppard-tom.html#33484
- ^ Brageprisen nominations 2010.