The Patrick D. Smith Literature Award, named for the three-time Pulitzer Prize winning Florida native of the same name, is awarded to an author with outstanding writing about Florida. Smith is probably best known for his novel: “A Land Remembered.”
At the 2002 Annual Meeting of the Florida Historical Society Patrick D. Smith was named the "Greatest Living Floridian." Smith acknowledged the honor, but refused the $5,000 prize. Since then, the society has used the money to endow the "Patrick D. Smith Award for Florida Literature" with a $200.00 stipend each year.
This year’s winner is author Suzanne Williams, chosen for her historical suspense novel “Paper Woman” (Whittler’s Bench Press, ISBN 0-9785265-1-1-, $19.95, http://www.dramtreebooks.com/)
Williams, who now lives in Raleigh, N.C., strives to make her novels as historically accurate as possible, bringing women into a history that previously omitted them.
The award will be presented in Clearwater, FL, on May 24 at the luxurious Belleview Biltmore Resort.
I will be interviewing Suzanne for a future blog. So stay tuned.
Showing posts with label Patrick D. Smith Literature Award. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Patrick D. Smith Literature Award. Show all posts
Wednesday, May 16, 2007
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