Literature Award Renamed for Richard Holbrooke
By DAN SEWELL - Associated Press
Aug 03, 2011
CINCINNATI - An award celebrating the power of literature to promote peace has been renamed in honor of the late Ambassador Richard Holbrooke, and author Barbara Kingsolver will be this year's recipient.
The Dayton Literary Peace Prize's lifetime achievement award was first given in 2006. It was inspired by the Dayton peace accords on Bosnia brokered by Holbrooke in 1995 negotiations at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base near the southwest Ohio city.
Founder Sharon Rab says that the prize organization wanted to honor Holbrooke's international role in seeking peace and his special importance to Dayton. The longtime U.S. diplomat died last December at age 69 following surgery on his torn aorta.
Kingsolver will receive the Richard C. Holbrooke Distinguished Achievement Award in Dayton on Nov. 13. It carries a $10,000 prize; the peace prize group is supported by a combination of corporations, schools, groups that promote the arts, and private donors.
"I love that the organization is honoring this sort of higher value of literature to create empathy," Kingsolver told The Associated Press. "For the duration of a novel we are experiencing another person's life ... the creation of empathy for the theoretical stranger can cultivate peace. You can't bang anyone over the head with a stick and make peace; you only do by convincing people that strangers' lives are valid and equal to their own; that's what literature does."
Kingsolver said she was "astonished and very happy" to join previous winners who are "like a partial list of my heroes." They include Nobel Peace Prize laureate Elie Wiesel, the late Chicago-based author Studs Terkel, and Taylor Branch, who chronicled the civil rights struggle.
Her award-winning novels include "The Poisonwood Bible" and "The Lacuna."
----
----
Sound Off...What do you think? Join the discussion
Copyright 2011 by Associated Press

