A MAN OF TWO FACES:
A Memoir, A History, A Memorial
by Viet Thanh Nguyen
MESHI:
A personal history of Japanese food
by Katherine Tamiko Arguile
NERVOUS:
Essays on Heritage and Healing
by Jen Soriano
CHINESE PRODIGAL:
A Memoir in Eight Arguments
by David Shih
Groundbreaking, Innovative, Cathartic, Transformative: A new crop of memoirs masterfully weaves the historical, the present, and the personal.
This year we present four winners that we feel are of equal urgency to readers. Where history meets the human being we find these deeply personal, achingly relatable, entirely universal memoirs. Don’t walk, run to your local bookseller, because these are the books that every American needs to read this year. For outstanding contributions to the genre, we recognize the following memoirs:
A MAN OF TWO FACES: A Memoir, A History, A Memorial
by Viet Thanh Nguyen
Grove Press / Grove Atlantic ISBN 9780802160508
Innovative. Viet Thanh Nguyen’s novel The Sympathizer won the Pulitzer Prize for Fiction and numerous other awards. With insight, humor, formal invention, and lyricism, in A Man of Two Faces Viet expands the genre of personal memoir by acknowledging larger stories of refugeehood, colonization, and ideas about Vietnam and America, writing with his trademark sardonic wit and incisive analysis, as well as a deep emotional openness about his life as a father and a son.
MESHI: A personal history of Japanese food
by Katherine Tamiko Arguile
Affirm Press / ISBN 9781922400703
Cathartic. Meshi is a comfort and for the grieving soul. A hybrid memoir framed by the 72 micro-seasons of Japan, and the food that is so fundamental to the Japanese soul. It reflects on grief, loss, and displacement, and searches for light in adversity through both the personal and universal. It explores ways to transmute suffering into strength, the way the art of kintsugi repairs broken tea bowls with gold to make them stronger and more beautiful than they were before. A stunning hardcover book, each chapter is illustrated with the author’s linocuts.
NERVOUS: Essays on Heritage and Healing
by Jen Soriano
Amistad / Harper Collins ISBN 978-0063230132
Amistad/HarperCollins Transformative. NERVOUS is a deeply moving personal inquiry into the sources of our sufferings, and the ways we can all seek and find healing in a nervous modern world.
From the Introduction: “We are nervous beings, in nervous nations, at an increasingly nervous time. I wrote this book for those of us who have felt crazy and alone. For those of us who have been told to forget about the past, to stop being weak, and to swallow our pain. For all of us with a knowing body. For babaylan who remember a time before silence. For pearls in their shells seeking conditions to shine. My story is just one ripple in an emerging ecosystem of interdependence, where we don’t have to bear generational pain alone.”
CHINESE PRODIGAL: A Memoir in Eight Arguments
by David Shih
Atlantic Monthly Press / ISBN 978-0802158994
Groundbreaking. Hey, Generation X! You know that one Asian kid in your elementary class? Yeah, David Shih, that’s right. Well, he wrote a book and this is it. Its about him and its about you. Yeah, you! What he says is gonna blow your mind! Part memoir, part examination of American culture, and what it means to be Asian American in a country that doesn’t see color –only black or white. It is a moving testimony of a son, father, and citizen stepping outside the identities imposed on him. By mining his own experiences—from his failures of filiality to his negotiations within an interracial marriage—Shih masterfully captures the intimate costs of becoming an American.
THE SHORT LIST:
(Formally the Category winners) These are more memoirs we think you will want to know about. Click on the links to learn about each book. Several of these award-winning memoirs should be required reading.
- They Got Daddy: One Family’s Reckoning with Racism and Faith by Sharon Tubbs (Quarry Books)
- Orphan Bachelors by Fae Myene Ng (Grove Press)
- Now You Are a Missing Person by Susan Hayden (MoonTidePress.com)
- One Day on the Gold Line: A Memoir in Essays by Carla Rachel Sameth (Golden Foothills Press)
- Between Before and After by Edita Mujkic (Hawkeye Publishing)
- Difficult Beauty: Rambles, Rants and Intimate Conversations by Lauren Crux (Many Names Press)
- A Hard Silence: One daughter remaps family, grief, and faith when HIV/AIDS changes it all by Melanie Brooks (Vine Leaves Press)
- Beyond 70: The Lives of Creative Women by Stacy Russo (Nauset Press)
- My Father, Fortune-tellers & Me by Eufemia Fantetti (Mother Tongue Publishing)
- Slue Foot-A Black Girl Grows Up In Midwest America by Margaret Edwards (Hallard Press)
- Lying Down with Dogs by Linda Caradine (Unsolicited Press)
- Brontosaurus Illustrated by Leanne Grabel (The Opiate Books)
- The Man by Darcy Hicks (An Unpublished Manuscript)
- Dead Dad Season by Jamie Beth Cohen (An Unpublished Manuscript)
- Shelter: the architecture of our days by Stokley Towles (An Unpublished Manuscript)
- From A Sheltered Life In The Bronx: A Memoir by Miss Ruth Green (An Unpublished Manuscript)
We thank everyone who has participated in this year’s contest. Your submission helps sustain The Prize and Memoir Magazine’s various initiatives. We continue to be amazed by the exciting ways writers are continually expanding the Memoir genre to express their personal stories and emotional truths: such as memoirs in essays, illustrated graphic memoirs, and memoirs that weave together recipes and art! We look forward to next year’s 2025 Memoir Prize!