NEW YORK — Leslie Marmon Silko, winner of a lifetime achievement award from the American Academy of Arts and Letters, sees universal reach in her writings about her Laguna Pueblo heritage.
“I'm especially proud of asserting the notion that we indigenous people are citizens of the world,” she said in a recent telephone interview. “I've tried in my fiction to reflect that we have the same underpinnings, mythologically, that the Greeks and Romans and Scandinavians have given to the culture.”
The academy announced Wednesday that the 72-year-old Silko is this year's winner of the Christopher Lightfoot Walker Award for “significant contribution” to American literature. A key member of the so-called “Native American Renaissance” that began in the 1960s, she is known for her poems and stories and for such novels as “Ceremony” and “Almanac of the Dead.” She said winning the Walker award encouraged her about the current state of reading.
“It has seemed that literature and books and writing have gone into decline in the digital age,” she said. “I had forgotten that there are people who still love literature, serious literature.”
The Lightfoot award is a biannual prize first given in 2018 to Thomas Pynchon.
The academy awarded prizes to 19 writers overall, 13 of them women. The
Valeria Luiselli received a $10,000 prize for “a young writer of considerable literary talent” for her novel “Lost Children Archive.” The E.M. Forster Award, a $10,000
The academy is an
Hillel Italie, The Associated Press