The Books That Won the 2026 Pulitzer Prizes

Nineteen books were recognized as winners or finalists for the Pulitzer Prize on Monday, in the categories of fiction, general nonfiction, memoir or autobiography, poetry, biography and history.

This dizzying and fantastical story — one of the Book Review’s 10 Best Books of 2025 — is about a group of soldiers who encounter a fallen angel on the battlefield. Set during World War I, it unfolds in a single sentence. Writing in The New York Times, the novelist Ben H. Winters called it a “thunderous gallop of a war novel,” and praised the book’s stunning conclusion, with one caveat: “I’m not sure if a book that ends with a comma rather than a period can be said to conclude at all.” Read our review.

The Harvard historian and New Yorker staff writer offers a lively account of Americans’ long, frustrated efforts to change the country’s chief governing document, drawing on the stories of mostly unknown figures and making a case for what present-day Americans can learn from their efforts. It would be a disservice, she suggests, to forget the mutability twisted into the Constitution’s very DNA. Our reviewer called the book a “startling and innovative recasting of Americans’ intermittently successful, but now increasingly futile, efforts to change the country’s basic laws.” Read our review.

Goldstone’s examination of the homelessness crisis in America focuses on “the working homeless,” people with low paying jobs who can’t afford housing. Goldstone tells the stories of Atlanta residents who work long hours but are still broke, and have to sleep in their cars or crash with friends. Our critic Jennifer Szalai lauded “There Is No Place for Us,” one of the Book Review’s 10 Best Books of 2025, as “an exceptional feat of reporting” that is both moving and enraging. Read our review.

Li’s devastating and raw memoir recounts losing her two sons, Vincent and James, who both died by suicide when they were teenagers. Li explores the contours of a grief so profound she compares it to living in an abyss. Writing in The Times, our reviewer called the book “a memoir unlike others, strange and profound and fiercely determined not to look away.” Read our review, and our profile of Yiyun Li.

In both her poetry and her academic work, Spahr takes as her central concern the relationship between literature and the state. Accordingly, in this book, her sixth collection of poems, she writes about everything from climate change to the rise of the alt-right. True to its title, the book is preoccupied with the purpose of poetry. “I feel like the question of the book is: What does poetry do in these moments?” Spahr said in a statement last spring, when the book was published. “What role does it have?”

“Hamilton” vaulted the story of the Schuyler sisters to notoriety, but their history is far richer than their roles onstage. Vaill infuses the lives of Angelica, Peggy and Eliza (Alexander Hamilton’s wife) with so much warmth and verve that, as our reviewer wrote, they practically “dwarf both the Revolutionary War and the political disputes that followed.” Read our review.


Source:

www.nytimes.com