# The 2024 National Book Award Winners, Explained

> Percival Everett's James topped Fiction, Jason De León's Soldiers and Kings won Nonfiction, and three other titles took the National Book Foundation's 75th annual prizes — who won, why the judges chose them, and what happened at Cipriani Wall Street.

*Published 2026-07-10 · By James Whitfield*

The 2024 winners at a glance
At the 75th National Book Awards on November 20, 2024, at Cipriani Wall Street in New York, the National Book Foundation named five competitive winners: **Percival Everett** (Fiction, *James*), **Jason De León** (Nonfiction, *Soldiers and Kings*), **Lena Khalaf Tuffaha** (Poetry, *Something About Living*), **Yáng Shuāng-zǐ** with translator **Lin King** (Translated Literature, *Taiwan Travelogue*), and **Shifa Saltagi Safadi** (Young People's Literature, *Kareem Between*). Each received $10,000, a bronze medal, and a statue.

Every November, the National Book Foundation gathers the American literary world at a black-tie dinner to hand out the country's oldest major book prize. The 2024 edition was the 75th running of the National Book Awards, and it landed at a moment when the ceremony's usual mix of celebration and shop talk carried extra weight: judges and winners alike spoke openly about book bans, war, and political division even as they toasted five very different, hard-won books. Below is a clear accounting of who won, what their books are about, and why the judging panels picked them.

## Who won the 2024 National Book Award for Fiction?

Percival Everett won the Fiction prize for *James* (Doubleday), which reimagines Mark Twain's *Adventures of Huckleberry Finn* entirely from the point of view of Jim, the enslaved man who flees down the Mississippi River with Huck. Everett, a longtime USC creative-writing professor with dozens of prior books to his name, used the retelling to hand Jim interiority, wit, and a secret literacy that Twain's original never allowed him. [NPR's coverage of the ceremony](https://www.npr.org/2024/11/21/nx-s1-5189258/percival-everett-wins-the-national-book-award-fiction-prize) noted that Everett used his acceptance speech to thank the judges for "putting their reputations on the line," a nod to how pointed the book's premise is. *James* did not stop at the National Book Award: it also won the 2024 Kirkus Prize, was shortlisted for the Booker Prize, and went on to win the 2025 Pulitzer Prize for Fiction, an unusually complete sweep for a single novel.

## Which books won Nonfiction, Poetry, Translated Literature, and Young People's Literature?

The remaining four competitive prizes went to writers working in strikingly different registers, from embedded ethnography to verse for middle-grade readers. The table below summarizes each winning title, its category, and its publisher.
2024 National Book Award winners by categoryCategoryWinning titleWinner(s)PublisherFictionJamesPercival EverettDoubledayNonfictionSoldiers and Kings: Survival and Hope in the World of Human SmugglingJason De LeónViking BooksPoetrySomething About LivingLena Khalaf TuffahaUniversity of Akron PressTranslated LiteratureTaiwan TravelogueYáng Shuāng-zǐ; translated by Lin KingGraywolf PressYoung People's LiteratureKareem BetweenShifa Saltagi SafadiG.P. Putnam's Sons
Jason De León's *Soldiers and Kings* is the product of seven years of on-the-ground ethnographic fieldwork with migrant smugglers moving people from Central America and Mexico toward the United States border; De León, a UCLA anthropology professor and MacArthur Fellow, built the book around the life and death of a young coyote who tries and fails to leave the smuggling trade behind. Lena Khalaf Tuffaha's *Something About Living* took the Poetry prize for a collection built around Palestinian displacement and inherited memory. In Translated Literature, *Taiwan Travelogue* follows a Japanese novelist's 1938 visit to then-colonial Taiwan and her entangled relationship with her young interpreter; translator Lin King, who submitted the manuscript to seven publishers before Graywolf Press accepted it, layered in her own annotations alongside the author's to help English-language readers track Taiwan's colonial-era history. And Shifa Saltagi Safadi's *Kareem Between*, a verse novel for young readers, follows a Syrian American seventh-grader confronting bullying and uncertainty over his family's immigration status.

## What happened at the 75th National Book Awards ceremony?

The ceremony and benefit dinner took place on November 20, 2024, at Cipriani Wall Street in New York City, hosted by comedian Kate McKinnon with a musical turn from Jon Batiste. It was the Foundation's 75th anniversary year, and the program leaned into that milestone while also making room for pointed commentary: multiple winners used the stage to address rising book challenges in American schools and libraries, ongoing war and displacement abroad, and the stakes of storytelling in a polarized moment. Each of the five category winners received $10,000, a bronze medal, and a statue, while the non-winning finalists in each category received $1,000 and a bronze medal apiece.

## Who received the National Book Foundation's lifetime honors in 2024?

Beyond the five competitive categories, the Foundation presented two special honors. Novelist Barbara Kingsolver, author of *The Poisonwood Bible* and *Demon Copperhead*, received the Medal for Distinguished Contribution to American Letters, the Foundation's lifetime-achievement award, presented by literary agent Sam Stoloff. In her remarks, Kingsolver argued that writers do their best work as disruptors who "crack people open." Publisher W. Paul Coates, founder of Black Classic Press and father of writer Ta-Nehisi Coates, received the Literarian Award for Outstanding Service, presented by novelist Walter Mosley, in recognition of decades spent reissuing out-of-print books by and about Black writers.

## Why did these five winning books matter to critics and readers?

Taken together, the 2024 winners reward a specific kind of ambition: books that reframe a familiar story, embed a writer inside a world readers rarely see firsthand, or carry a regional literary tradition into English for the first time. *James* took one of the most canonical (and most contested) novels in American literature and rebuilt it from its most silenced character's point of view. *Soldiers and Kings* asked readers to sit with smugglers as full people rather than as a headline abstraction. *Taiwan Travelogue* introduced English-language readers to a layered, colonial-era Taiwan through a translator's meticulous, annotated choices about language itself. Each of these choices is also a bet on what a wide readership will follow — and the judging panels, chaired that year by figures including novelist Lauren Groff for Fiction and scholar Tressie McMillan Cottom for Nonfiction, rewarded books that asked for real patience and paid it back. For readers building a shelf from the 2024 list, the throughline is books that use craft to make an underrepresented perspective impossible to look away from.

## Sources

1. [75th National Book Awards — Winners](https://www.nationalbook.org/awards2024-honorees/)
2. [National Book Awards 2024](https://www.nationalbook.org/awards-prizes/national-book-awards-2024/)
3. [Percival Everett wins the National Book Award fiction prize](https://www.npr.org/2024/11/21/nx-s1-5189258/percival-everett-wins-the-national-book-award-fiction-prize)
4. [Taiwan Travelogue](https://www.graywolfpress.org/books/taiwan-travelogue)
5. [Congratulations to the Winners of the 2024 National Book Awards!](https://authorsguild.org/news/2024-national-book-awards/)
6. [UCLA's Jason De León wins National Book Award for Nonfiction](https://newsroom.ucla.edu/releases/ucla-jason-de-leon-wins-2024-national-book-award-for-nonfiction)
7. [Percival Everett's 'James' wins National Book Award for fiction](https://www.nbcnews.com/news/nbcblk/percival-everetts-james-wins-national-book-award-fiction-rcna181204)

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Source: https://bookserif.com/book-culture/national-book-award-2024-winners
Index: https://bookserif.com/llms.txt · Full text: https://bookserif.com/llms-full.txt
