Pulitzer Prizes 2010: Complete list of winners
The 2010 Pulitzer Prizes proved once again why literary awards matter—they shine a spotlight on voices that might otherwise fly under the radar, and they spark conversations about what we value in storytelling. This year’s winners felt particularly adventurous, from the experimental poetry of Rae Armantrout to Paul Harding’s meditative debut novel Tinkers, which surprised many observers by taking the Fiction prize over more commercially prominent contenders. The awards maintained their tradition of honoring serious nonfiction, with David E. Hoffman’s The Dead Hand offering a chilling deep dive into Cold War espionage and Liaquat Ahamed’s Lords of Finance tracing the financial architects whose decisions rippled through the twentieth century. Meanwhile, the Drama prize went to the contemporary musical Next to Normal, a choice that validated the musical theater form as worthy of the highest honors.
What made 2010 particularly interesting was how the Pulitzer Prizes selections reflected a moment when readers and critics were hungry for depth over spectacle. T.J. Stiles’s The First Tycoon, a meticulously researched biography of Cornelius Vanderbilt, demonstrated the enduring appeal of sweeping historical narratives, while Armantrout’s deceptively slim collection of avant-garde verse showed that poetry could still captivate the judges even in an increasingly digital age. These six winners—spanning biography, drama, fiction, general nonfiction, history, and poetry—painted a portrait of American letters that valued both innovation and rigorous scholarship.
Here are the complete 2010 Pulitzer Prize winners:
Biography
The First Tycoon: The Epic Life of Cornelius Vanderbilt by T.J. Stiles
Drama
Next to Normal by Tom Kitt and Brian Yorkey
Fiction
- Tinkers by Paul Harding
General Nonfiction
The Dead Hand: The Untold Story of the Cold War Arms Race and Its Dangerous Legacy by David E. Hoffman
History
Lords of Finance: The Bankers Who Broke the World by Liaquat Ahamed
Poetry
- Versed by Rae Armantrout