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William Saroyan International Prize For 2008 Linked With Writer's Ce

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  • William Saroyan International Prize For 2008 Linked With Writer's Ce

    WILLIAM SAROYAN INTERNATIONAL PRIZE FOR 2008 LINKED WITH WRITER'S CENTENNIAL

    Stanford Report
    http://news-service.stanford.edu/news/2007/august 22/saroyan-082207.html
    Aug 22 2007

    The third William Saroyan International Prize for Writing (also known
    as the Saroyan Prize) will coincide with the California writer's
    centennial celebrations in 2008. The $12,500 biennial prize, awarded
    for fiction and non-fiction, is sponsored by Stanford University
    Libraries in partnership with the William Saroyan Foundation.

    Entries must be received on or before January 31, 2008. The English
    language works must be available for purchase in book form by
    the general public and published during the 2005-2007 period. The
    judges will consider literary fiction (including novels, short story
    collections and drama) and literary non-fiction (biography, history
    and memoirs) of any length. They will be looking for strong literary
    merit that honors the Saroyan legacy, with particular interest in
    non-fiction in the Saroyan tradition-memoirs, portraits and excursions
    into neighborhood and community. Winners will be publicly recognized
    at the centennial celebrations on Sept. 5, 2008. Official entry forms
    and rules are available at http://saroyanprize.stanford.edu/.

    The first William Saroyan International Prize for Writing was awarded
    in 2003 to Jonathan Safran Foer for his novel Everything is Illuminated
    (Houghton Mifflin, 2002). The second Saroyan Prize, awarded in 2005,
    was the first to be offered for both fiction and non-fiction. George
    Hagen received the fiction prize for his novel The Laments (Random
    House, 2004); the non-fiction prize went to Mark Arax and Rick Wartzman
    for The King of California (Public Affairs, 2005).

    The William Saroyan Foundation, officially founded by Saroyan in 1966,
    decided in 1990 to bring together the entire literary estate into a
    single archive. The trustees eventually offered Stanford University
    the assembled Saroyan literary collection.

    "The Saroyan Prize is an integral part of the library's ongoing and
    active involvement with the Saroyan archive, but it also provides a
    wonderful opportunity for Stanford students and alumni, as well as
    literati everywhere, to interact actively with the emerging literary
    figures of our time," said Michael A. Keller, Stanford University
    Librarian. "We are particularly pleased to be offering the prize
    during this centennial celebration of Saroyan's birth, when so much
    attention is being given to Saroyan's life and work."

    "The Saroyan Foundation is pleased to be involved in fulfilling
    Saroyan's dream of establishing a writing prize to encourage and
    perpetuate the art he so loved," said Haig Mardikian, president of
    the William Saroyan Foundation. "Saroyan not only had a great passion
    for writing, he also was an accomplished visual abstract artist; so
    it is particularly fitting that this award is being granted during
    the Saroyan centennial celebrations where we are commemorating many
    of Saroyan's artistic achievements."

    The Fresno-born Saroyan, an American writer and playwright, was
    a Pulitzer Prize and Academy Award winner best known for his short
    stories about humorous experiences of immigrant families and children
    in California. Much of Saroyan's work is clearly autobiographical,
    although similar in style and technique to fiction. Saroyan was the
    fourth child of Armenian immigrants. He battled his way through poverty
    and rose to literary prominence in the early 1930s when national
    magazines began publishing his short stories, including "The Daring
    Young Man on the Flying Trapeze," "My Name Is Aram," "Inhale & Exhale,"
    "Three Times Three" and "Peace, It's Wonderful." Saroyan wrote plays
    for Broadway and screenplays for Hollywood, including My Heart's in
    the Highlands, The Time of Your Life, The Beautiful People and The
    Human Comedy.
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