National Book Critics Circle Award 2021: Complete list of winners
The 2021 National Book Critics Circle Award winners showcase the kind of literary range that keeps this prestigious honor relevant year after year. From Clint Smith’s sweeping examination of slavery’s legacy in How the Word Is Passed to Honorée Fanonne Jeffers’s ambitious novel The Love Songs of W.E.B. Du Bois, this year’s honorees demonstrate how powerful storytelling can tackle both intimate personal truths and the broadest questions of American history. The Circle, which has been recognizing outstanding book criticism and literature since 1974, once again proved its eye for work that matters—not just as craft, but as cultural intervention.
What stands out across these six categories is how many of the winners grapple with identity, memory, and the spaces where personal and historical reckoning collide. Rebecca Donner’s biography All the Frequent Troubles of Our Days traces one woman’s resistance to Nazi Germany, while Jeremy Atherton Lin’s Gay Bar explores queer life and community with both specificity and vulnerability. Melissa Febos’s Girlhood, honored in the Criticism category, and Diane Seuss’s Frank: Sonnets round out a slate that feels less like a collection of separate works and more like a conversation about how we document and understand ourselves.
Here’s a closer look at the complete list of 2021 National Book Critics Circle Award winners across all categories:
Autobiography
Gay Bar: Why We Went Out by Jeremy Atherton Lin
Biography
All the Frequent Troubles of Our Days: The True Story of the American Woman at the Heart of the German Resistance to Hitler by Rebecca Donner
Criticism
Girlhood by Melissa Febos
Fiction
The Love Songs of W.E.B. Du Bois by Honorée Fanonne Jeffers
Nonfiction
Poetry
Frank: Sonnets by Diane Seuss