Pulitzer Prizes 1996: Complete list of winners

The 1996 Pulitzer Prize winners showcased a remarkable range of American voices grappling with identity, history, and the human condition. Richard Ford’s Independence Day claimed the fiction prize, marking a significant moment for a novelist who’d already established himself as a master of suburban American life. But perhaps the year’s most culturally resonant win came in drama, where Jonathan Larson’s groundbreaking musical Rent became the first work in that category to capture the zeitgeist of a generation—a bittersweet triumph given Larson’s death from an aortic aneurysm just days before the musical’s opening night in 1996.

The nonfiction and history categories revealed the prize committee’s appetite for ambitious scholarship. Tina Rosenberg’s The Haunted Land offered an unflinching examination of post-communist Europe’s difficult reckoning with its past, while Alan Taylor’s William Cooper’s Town traced the foundations of American expansion through meticulous research and elegant prose. Meanwhile, Jack Miles’s unconventional God: A Biography reimagined scripture as literary text, and Jorie Graham’s The Dream of the Unified Field demonstrated poetry’s continued capacity to challenge and transform readers.

Here’s a closer look at all the 1996 Pulitzer Prize winners across the major categories:

Biography

Drama

  • Cover of Rent Rent by Jonathan Larson

Fiction

General Nonfiction

History

Poetry