Colson Whitehead's 'Crook Manifesto' wins $50,000 Gotham Prize for outstanding book about NYC
Previous winners of the $50,000 award include Andrea Elliott and James McBride
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Colson Whitehead's latest literary honor feels very much at home.
The author's "Crook Manifesto," a crime story set in 1970s Harlem and centered on a beleaguered furniture store owner, is this year's winner of the Gotham Book Prize for an outstanding work about New York City. The $50,000 award was established four years ago by bookstore owner-philanthropist Bradley Tusk and political strategist Howard Wolfson.
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″Crook Manifesto is a portrait of a man, but also his city," Whitehead, a native New Yorker, said in a statement Wednesday. "Capturing the dynamism of my hometown and its crazy citizens is at the heart of the project, so I can’t express how lovely it is for the book to be recognized by the Gotham Book Prize."
In a joint statement, Tusk and Wolfson praised Whitehead's novel as the kind of book they had hoped to celebrate, one that captures "the city in all of its complexity."
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Previous winners of the Gotham Prize include Andrea Elliott's nonfiction "Invisible Child" and the James McBride novel "Deacon King Kong."
Whitehead is among the country's most celebrated authors, a two-time Pulitzer Prize winner whose works include "The Underground Railroad" and "The Nickel Boys." He has called "Crook Manifesto" the second book of a planned Harlem trilogy, which began in 2021 with "Harlem Shuffle."