PEN/Hemingway Award 1990s: A decade of winners
The 1990s were a transformative decade for American fiction, and no award captured that creative ferment quite like the PEN/Hemingway Award. Established to honor outstanding debut novels, this prize became a launching pad for some of the era’s most vital voices—writers who would shape literary culture well into the twenty-first century. From Mark Richard’s haunting The Ice at the Bottom of the World in 1990 to the decade’s closing with Rosina Lippi’s Homestead, the award consistently recognized fiction that pushed against conventional boundaries, whether through experimental form, unflinching social observation, or the collision of cultures and identities.
What made this decade particularly striking was the PEN/Hemingway Award’s role in amplifying diverse perspectives at a moment when American literature was undergoing significant demographic and thematic shifts. Edward P. Jones’s Lost in the City offered richly layered stories of Washington, D.C.’s African American communities, while Chang-Rae Lee’s Native Speaker explored the fractured identity of a Korean-American protagonist with psychological nuance that felt wholly original. Ha Jin’s Ocean of Words, arriving near decade’s end, signaled the emergence of Chinese-American voices telling stories rooted in contemporary China. These weren’t just individual triumphs; they marked a broader recalibration of whose stories deserved literary prominence.
The award itself seemed to grow more confident in its selections as the nineties progressed, moving beyond the predictable to embrace ambitious, sometimes formally inventive work. Whether it was Bernard Cooper’s genre-defying Maps to Anywhere or Dagoberto Gilb’s unflinching look at working-class Mexican-American life in The Magic of Blood, the judges demonstrated a commitment to debut writers doing genuinely interesting things. Below, explore the complete list of PEN/Hemingway Award winners from this dynamic decade.
1990
Debut Novel
The Ice at the Bottom of the World by Mark Richard
1991
Debut Novel
Maps to Anywhere by Bernard Cooper
1992
Debut Novel
Wartime Lies by Louis Begley
1993
Debut Novel
- Lost in the City by Edward P. Jones
1994
Debut Novel
The Magic of Blood by Dagoberto Gilb
1995
Debut Novel
The Grass Dancer by Susan Power
1996
Debut Novel
- Native Speaker by Chang-Rae Lee
1997
Debut Novel
Ocean of Words by Ha Jin
1998
Debut Novel
A Private State by Charlotte Bacon
1999
Debut Novel
- Homestead by Rosina Lippi