Annal:2000 National Book Award for Nonfiction
From AwardAnnals
Results of the National Book Award in the year 2000. For a ranked list of books, try an honor roll:
In the Heart of the Sea: The Tragedy of the Whaleship Essex
- 2000 NBA–Nonfiction winner
- 2000 LATimes–History finalist
- Score: 16.5
In the Heart of the Sea brings to new life the incredible story of the wreck of the whaleship Essex—an event as mythic in its own century as the Titanic disaster in ours, and the inspiration for the climax of Moby-Dick. In a harrowing page-turner, Nathaniel Philbrick restores this epic story to its rightful place in American history.
In 1820, the 240-ton Essex set sail from Nantucket on a routine voyage for whales. Fifteen months later, in the farthest reaches of the South Pacific, it was repeatedly rammed and sunk by an eighty-ton…
The Collaborator: The Trial & Execution of Robert Brasillach
- 2000 LATimes–History winner
- 2000 NBA–Nonfiction finalist
- 2000 NBCC–Nonfiction finalist
- Score: 22.5
On February 6, 1945, Robert Brasillach was executed for treason by a French firing squad. He was a writer of some distinction—a prolific novelist and a keen literary critic. He was also a dedicated anti-Semite, an acerbic opponent of French democracy, and editor in chief of the fascist weekly Je Suis Partout, in whose pages he regularly printed wartime denunciations of Jews and resistance activists.
Was Brasillach in fact guilty of treason? Was he condemned for his denunciations of the resistance, or singled out as a suspected homosexual? Was it right…
From Dawn to Decadence: 500 Years of Western Cultural Life 1500 to the Present
- 2000 NBA–Nonfiction finalist
- 2000 NBCC–Criticism finalist
- Score: 12.5
Highly regarded here and abroad for some thirty works of cultural history and criticism, master historian Jacques Barzun has now set down in one continuous narrative the sum of his discoveries and conclusions about the whole of Western culture since 1500.
In this account, Barzun describes what Western Man wrought from the Renaisance and Reformation down to the present in the double light of its own time and our pressing concerns. He introduces characters and incidents with his unusual literary style and grace, bringing to the fore those that have “Puritans as…
W.E.B. Du Bois: The Fight for Equality and the American Century 1919-1963
- 2001 Pulitzer–Biography winner
- 2000 NBA–Nonfiction finalist
- Score: 16.51
The second volume of the Pulitzer Prize—winning biography that The Washington Post hailed as “an engrossing masterpiece”
Charismatic, singularly determined, and controversial, W.E.B. Du Bois was a historian, novelist, editor, sociologist, founder of the NAACP, advocate of women’s rights, and the premier architect of the Civil Rights movement. His hypnotic voice thunders out of David Levering Lewis’s monumental biography like a locomotive under full steam.
This second volume of what is already a classic work begins with the triumphal return from WWI…
Darkness in El Dorado: How Scientists and Journalists Devastated the Amazon
- 2000 LATimes–Current Interest finalist
- 2000 NBA–Nonfiction finalist
- Score: 12.5
The explosive and highly controversial National Book Award finalist that has forever changed the discipline of anthropology. Thought to be the last “virgin” people, the Yanomami were considered the most savage and warlike tribe on earth, as well as one of the most remote, secreted in the jungles and highlands of the Venezuelan and Brazilian rainforest. Preeminent anthropologists like Napoleon Chagnon and Jacques Lizot founded their careers in the 1960s by “discovering” the Yanomami’s ferocious warfare and sexual competition. Their research is now examined in…
