
Americanah, which has also just been longlisted for the Baileys women's fiction prize, alongside titles by Evie Wyld, Elizabeth Gilbert and Booker-winner Eleanor Catton, had previously found favour among US book reviewers. The New York Times called it "witheringly trenchant and hugely empathetic, both worldly and geographically precise, a novel that holds the discomfiting realities of our times fearlessly before us", and the Washington Post said it contained "a ruthless honesty about the ugly and beautiful sides" of the United States and Nigeria.
At the ceremony on Thursday, Sheri Fink's "extraordinary reconstruction" of the days following Hurricane Katrina, Five Days at Memorial, won the NBCC non-fiction prize, and Frank Bidart took the poetry award for his collection Metaphysical Dog, "which continues his lifelong exploration of the big questions", said the NBCC. Farewell, Fred Voodoo by Amy Wilentz, a "gritty, surprising" memoir based on her years reporting from Haiti, won the autobiography award; the biography prize was taken by Leo Damrosch's "spellbinding" life of Jonathan Swift; and Anthony Marra's A Constellation of Vital Phenoma won the first John Leonard prize for an outstanding debut book in any genre.








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