Project HBW Blog

Edward P. Jones


Kenton Rambsy (HBW Staff Member)

Edward P. Jones standing outside in front of a white building.

Edward P. Jones is another writer in the “100 Novels Collection” who is more known for his short stories. Surprisingly, his novel, The Known World, won the Pulitzer Prize for Fiction in 2004. Even still, Jones has expressed favor for using the short story form over the novel form in his writing.

His novel, a neo-slave narrative, explores human bondage from an alternative perspective. Jones allows readers to envision the dark period of legalized human bondage in America from the perspective of a black slave owner. Jones tells the stories of people living in Manchester Country, Virginia in episodic form. His novel reveals how social and political structures impeded upon the good intentions of people and dictate their actions. In other words, Jones’s suggests that despite a person’s intentions to do good, the societal norm can most often influence a person’s train of thought and behavior.

 

Katherine Bassard writes, “The economics of black slave-owning are perhaps less disturbing than the fact that many black masters held similar attitudes to slavery as their white counterparts.” Bassard’s words help readers to think more critically about how a willingness to integrate into mainstream activities in America causes people to adopt standards and customs that may in fact be troubling and damaging.

Below, I have provided a recap of Jones’s publications as well as his awards and nominations:

Fiction

Lost in the City (1992)

The Known World (2003)

All Aunt Hagar’s Children (2006)

Awards and Nominations

1992: Nominated National Book Award, Lost in the City

1993: Awarded PEN/Hemingway AwardLost in the City

1994: Awarded Lannan Literary Award for FictionLost in the City

2003: Nominated National Book AwardThe Known World

2003: Awarded National Book Critics Circle Award, The Known World

2004: Awarded Pulitzer Prize for FictionThe Known World

2005: Awarded International IMPAC Dublin Literary AwardThe Known World

2005: Awarded MacArthur Fellowship

2007: Nominated PEN/Faulkner Award, All Aunt Hagar’s Children

2010: Awarded PEN/Malamud Award for excellence in the art of the short story

Tags: 100 Novels

Edward P. Jones