The Great Gatsby didn’t win the Pulitzer Prize for fiction, and neither did these modern classics
By Janice Harayda
Sorry your favorite novel lost the 2007 Pulitzer Prize for fiction to Cormac McCarthy’s The Road? Consider this: The judges for the 1930 prize looked at Ernest Hemingway’s A Farewell to Arms and William Faulkner’s The Sound and the Fury and gave the fiction award to … Laughing Boy by Oliver La Farge. And those classics are hardly alone in having been snubbed. Some noteworthy losers and the novels that won the Pulitzer instead in the years listed:
1962
Loser: Catch-22 by Joseph Heller
Winner: The Edge of Sadness by Edwin O’Connor
1957
Loser: Seize the Day by Saul Bellow
Winner: The Fixer by Bernard Malamud
1952
Loser: The Catcher in the Rye by J.D. Salinger
Winner: The Caine Mutiny by Herman Wouk
1941
Loser: For Whom the Bell Tolls by Ernest Hemingway
Winner: Nobody. No award given.
1937
Loser: Absalom, Absalom! by William Faulkner
Winner: Gone With the Wind by Margaret Mitchell
1930
Losers: A Farewell to Arms by Ernest Hemingway and The Sound and the Fury by William Faulkner
Winner: Laughing Boy by Oliver La Farge
1928
Loser: Death Comes for the Archbishop by Willa Cather
Winner: The Bridge of San Luis Rey by Thornton Wilder
1926
Loser: The Great Gatsby
Winner: Arrowsmith by Sinclair Lewis
1921
Loser: Main Street by Sinclair Lewis
Winner: The Age of Innocence by Edith Wharton
(c) 2007 Janice Harayda. All rights reserved.