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2017 in literature

This article contains information about the literary events and publications of 2017.


This article contains information about the literary events and publications of 2017.

  • March – Emulating Kerouac's On the Road, Ross Goodwin drives from New York to New Orleans with an artificial intelligence device in a laptop hooked up to various sensors, whose output it turns into words printed on rolls of thermal paper; the result is published unedited as 1 the Road in 2018.

  • August – The Chinese crime novelist Liu Yongbiao is arrested and eventually sentenced to death for four murders committed 22 years before.

  • August 30 – A hard disk drive containing unfinished work by the English comic fantasy novelist Sir Terry Pratchett (died 2015) is crushed by a steamroller on his instructions.

  • October 5 - The Swedish Academy announce that the 2017 Nobel Prize in Literature is awarded to Kazuo Ishiguro.

  • October – Tianjin Binhai Library opens in China.

  • December – Kristen Roupenian's short story "Cat Person" is published in The New Yorker and becomes a viral phenomenon online, with more than 2.6 million hits.

  • Tercentenary of the Aberbaijani poet Molla Panah Vagif's birth in 1717

  • 600th anniversary of the death of the Turkic mystical poet Imadaddin Nasimi in 1417

  • March 19 – Bicentenary of the Slovak writer Jozef Miloslav Hurban's birth

  • May 8 – The American novelist Thomas Pynchon turns 80.

  • June 18 – Centenary of the death of the Romanian literary critic and former prime minister Titu Maiorescu

  • June 26 – 20th anniversary of the publication of Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone (U.K. edition)

  • July 12 – 200th birthday of Henry David Thoreau, author of Walden

  • July 14 – Bicentenary of the early French salonnière Madame de Staël's death

  • July 18 – Bicentenary of the novelist Jane Austen's death in 1817

  • Nov 30 – 350th anniversary of the Anglo-Irish satirist Jonathan Swift's birth in 1667

  • December 4 – Bicentenary of the birth of Nikoloz Baratashvili's in 1817, who introduced European style into Georgian literature.

Dates after each title indicate U.S. publication, unless otherwise indicated.

  • Ayobami Adebayo – Stay With Me (March 2, UK)

  • Paul Auster – 4 3 2 1 (January 31)

  • Brunonia Barry – The Fifth Petal: a novel

  • Darcey Bell – A Simple Favor (March 1)

  • Dan Brown – Origin (October 3)

  • Peter Carey – A Long Way From Home (October 30, Australia)

  • J. M. Coetzee – The Schooldays of Jesus (February 21)

  • Claire G. Coleman – Terra Nullius

  • Curtis Dawkins – The Graybar Hotel (July 4)

  • Didier Decoin – Le bureau des jardins et des étangs (The Office of Gardens and Ponds) (France)

  • Steve Erickson – Shadowbahn

  • Christine Féret-Fleury – La fille qui lisait dans le Métro (The Girl who Read on the Metro) (March 9, France)

  • Karl Geary – Montpelier Parade (August 31)

  • John Grisham – Camino Island (June 6)

  • Mohsin Hamid – Exit West (March 2, UK)

  • Catherine Hernandez - Scarborough

  • Alan Hollinghurst – The Sparsholt Affair (September 26, UK)

  • Gail Honeyman – Eleanor Oliphant is Completely Fine (UK)

  • N. K. Jemisin – The Stone Sky (August 15)

  • Lisa Jewell – Then She Was Gone (July 27, UK)

  • The Justified Ancients of Mu Mu (Bill Drummond and Jimmy Cauty) – 2023 (August 23, UK)

  • Attica Locke – Bluebird, Bluebird

  • Ian McDonald – Luna: Wolf Moon (March 23, UK)

  • Jon McGregor – Reservoir 13 (April 6, UK)

  • Claude McKay (died 1948) – Amiable with Big Teeth: A Novel of the Love Affair Between the Communists and the Poor Black Sheep of Harlem (February 7; written 1941)

  • Robert Menasse – Die Hauptstadt (The Capital) (Germany)

  • Denise Mina – The Long Drop (March 2, UK)

  • Fiona Mozley – Elmet (August 10, UK)

  • Neel Mukherjee – A State of Freedom (July 6, UK)

  • Timothy Ogene – The Day Ends Like Any Day (April 6, UK)

  • James Patterson & Candice Fox – Never Never (January 16, US)

  • Tim Pears – The Horseman (January, UK)

  • Gwendoline Riley – First Love (February, UK)

  • Sally Rooney – Conversations with Friends (June, UK)

  • George Saunders – Lincoln in the Bardo (February 14)

  • Rachel Seiffert – A Boy in Winter (June 1, UK)

  • Kamila Shamsie – Home Fire (August 15, UK)

  • Joss Sheldon – Money Power Love (October 7, UK)

  • Elizabeth Strout – Anything is Possible (April 25)

  • J. R. R. Tolkien (died 1973), edited by Christopher Tolkien – Beren and Lúthien (June 1, UK; original version written 1917)

  • Zlatko Topčić

  • Éric Vuillard – The Order of the Day (L'Ordre du jour) (April 29, France)

  • Jesmyn Ward – Sing, Unburied, Sing (September 5)

  • Sarah Winman – Tin Man (July 27, UK)

  • Kathleen Winter – Lost in September

  • Galia Bernstein – I Am a Cat (November, Australia, Singapore)

  • Sarah Crossan – Moonrise (September 1, UK)

  • Lissa Evans – Wed Wabbit (January 5, UK)

  • Susie Ghahremani – Stack the Cats (USA)

  • Connie Glynn – Undercover Princess (October 30, UK)

  • Kiran Millwood Hargrave – The Island at the End of Everything (May 4, UK)

  • Amanda Hocking – Freeks (January 3)

  • Anna McQuinn – Lulu Gets a Cat

  • Philip Pullman – La Belle Sauvage, first volume in The Book of Dust trilogy (October 19, UK)

  • Katherine Rundell – The Explorer (August 10, UK)

  • Angie Thomas – The Hate U Give (September 28)

  • Jacqueline Wilson – Wave Me Goodbye (May 18, UK)

  • Helen Dunmore (died June 5) – Inside the Wave (April 27, UK)

  • Robert Macfarlane (illustrated by Jackie Morris) – The Lost Words: A Spell Book (October, UK)

  • Sinéad Morrissey – On Balance (May 25)

  • Jez Butterworth – The Ferryman

  • Inua Ellams – Barber Shop Chronicles

  • Joan Didion – South and West

  • Nathaniel Frank – Awakening: How Gays and Lesbians Brought Marriage Equality to America

  • Howard W. French – Everything Under the Heavens: How the Past Helps Shape China's Push for Global Power

  • David Grann – Killers of the Flower Moon

  • Paul Hawken – Drawdown (April 18)

  • Michel Houellebecq – En présence de Schopenhauer (January 11, France)

  • Christine Hyung-Oak Lee – Tell Me Everything You Don't Remember (February 14)

  • Obi Kaufmann – The California Field Atlas (September 1)

  • Roel Konijnendijk - Classical Greek Tactics

  • Jamie Oliver – 5 Ingredients – Quick and Easy Food (August 24, UK)

  • Walter Scheidel – The Great Leveler: Violence and the History of Inequality from the Stone Age to the Twenty-First Century

  • Matt Taibbi – Insane Clown President (January 17)

  • Hedi Yahmed – I Was in Raqqa (كنت في الرقة)

  • Craig Brown – Ma’am Darling: 99 Glimpses of Princess Margaret (September 21, UK)

  • Richard Ford – Between Them: Remembering My Parents (May 2)

  • Adam Kay – This is Going to Hurt: Secret Diaries of a Junior Doctor (September 7, UK)

  • Caroline Moorehead – A Bold and Dangerous Family: The Rossellis and the Fight Against Mussolini (June 15)

  • Rebecca Stott – In the Days of Rain: a daughter, a father, a cult (June 1, UK)

  • Stephen Westaby – Fragile Lives: A Heart Surgeon's Stories of Life and Death on the Operating Table (February 9, UK)

  • Xiaolu Guo – Once Upon a Time in the East (January 26)

Birth years link to the corresponding "[year] in literature" article:

  • January 2 – John Berger, English novelist, painter, art critic and poet, 90 (born 1926)
  • January 12 – William Peter Blatty, American author (The Exorcist), 89 (born 1928)
  • January 25:
  • January 29 – Howard Frank Mosher, American novelist (Where the Rivers Flow North), 74 (born 1942)
  • January 30 - Teresa Amy, Uruguayan poet and translator, 66 (born 1950)
  • February 1 – William Melvin Kelley, African-American novelist, 79 (born 1937)
  • February 8 – Tom Raworth, English poet, 78 (born 1938)
  • March 10 – Robert James Waller, American novelist (The Bridges of Madison County), 77 (b. 1939)
  • March 16 – Torgny Lindgren, Swedish writer, 78 (born 1938)
  • March 17 – Derek Walcott, Saint Lucian poet and playwright, Nobel Laureate in 1992, 87 (b. 1930)
  • April 1 – Yevgeny Yevtushenko, Russian poet, 84 (b. 1933)
  • May 1:
    • Anatoly Aleksin, Russian writer and poet, 92
    • Mohamed Talbi, Tunisian historian, 95
  • May 24 – Denis Johnson, American poet, novelist (Tree of Smoke), and short story writer (Jesus' Son), 67 (born 1949).
  • June 2
    • Jaroslav Kořán, Czech translator, writer and politician, 77
    • Barrie Pettman, English author, publisher and philanthropist, 73
    • S. Abdul Rahman, Indian poet, 79
  • June 4
    • Juan Goytisolo, Spanish essayist, poet and novelist, 86
    • Jack Trout, American marketer and author, 82
  • June 5
    • Helen Dunmore, English poet, novelist and children's writer, 64 (born 1952)
    • Anna Jókai, Hungarian writer, 84
  • June 8 – Naseem Khan, British journalist, 77
  • June 12 – C. Narayana Reddy, Indian poet and writer, Jnanpith Awardee, 85
  • June 27 – Michael Bond, English author (Paddington Bear), 91 (born 1926)
  • June 28 – Bruce Stewart, New Zealand author and playwright, 80
  • July 2
    • Tony Bianchi, Welsh-language author, 65
    • Jack Collom, American poet, essayist and poetry teacher, 85
    • Abiola Irele, Nigerian literary critic, 81
    • Fay Zwicky, Australian poet, 83
  • July 5 – Irina Ratushinskaya, Russian poet, 63 (cancer)
  • July 9
    • Miep Diekmann, Dutch writer of children's literature, 92 (born 1925)
    • Anton Nossik, Russian writer and internet entrepreneur, 51 (heart attack)
  • July 10 – Peter Härtling, German writer and poet, 83
  • September 23 – Harvey Jacobs, American author, 87
  • November 20 – Amir Hamed, Uruguayan writer, essayist and translator, 55 (born 1962)
  • November 23 – Božena Mačingová, Slovak writer, author of books for children and young adults (born 1922)
  • December 28 – Sue Grafton, American mystery author, 77

In alphabetical order of prize names:

  • Baileys Women's Prize for Fiction: Naomi Alderman for The Power
  • Baillie Gifford Prize: David France for How to Survive a Plague
  • Booker Prize: George Saunders for Lincoln in the Bardo
  • Caine Prize for African Writing: Bushra Elfadil, "The Story of the Girl Whose Bird Flew Away"
  • Camões Prize: Manuel Alegre
  • Costa Book Awards: Helen Dunmore (died June 5) for Inside the Wave (poetry)
  • Danuta Gleed Literary Award: Kris Bertin, Bad Things Happen
  • David Cohen Prize: Tom Stoppard
  • Dayne Ogilvie Prize: Kai Cheng Thom
  • Desmond Elliott Prize: Francis Spufford, Golden Hill
  • DSC Prize for South Asian Literature:
  • Dylan Thomas Prize: Fiona McFarlane for The High Places
  • European Book Prize: David Van Reybrouck, Zink and, Raffaele Simone, Si la démocratie fait faillite
  • Folio Prize: Hisham Matar for The Return
  • Friedenspreis des Deutschen Buchhandels: Margaret Atwood
  • German Book Prize: Robert Menasse for Die Hauptstadt
  • Goldsmiths Prize: Nicola Barker for H(a)ppy
  • Gordon Burn Prize: Denise Mina for The Long Drop
  • Governor General's Award for English-language fiction: Joel Thomas Hynes, We'll All Be Burnt in Our Beds Some Night
  • Governor General's Award for French-language fiction: Christian Guay-Poliquin, Le Poids de la neige
  • Grand Prix du roman de l'Académie française:
  • Hugo Award for Best Novel: N. K. Jemisin for The Obelisk Gate
  • International Booker Prize: David Grossman for A Horse Walks Into a Bar
  • International Prize for Arabic Fiction: Mohammed Hasan Alwan for A Small Death
  • International Dublin Literary Award: José Eduardo Agualusa for A General Theory of Oblivion
  • James Tait Black Memorial Prize for Fiction:
  • James Tait Black Memorial Prize for Biography:
  • Kerry Group Irish Fiction Award:
  • Lambda Literary Awards: Various categories, see 29th Lambda Literary Awards
  • Miguel de Cervantes Prize:
  • Miles Franklin Award: Josephine Wilson for Extinctions
  • National Biography Award:
  • National Book Award for Fiction:
  • National Book Critics Circle Award:
  • Newdigate Prize: Dominic Hand
  • Nike Award:
  • Nobel Prize in Literature: Kazuo Ishiguro
  • PEN/Faulkner Award for Fiction: Imbolo Mbue for Behold the Dreamers
  • PEN Center USA Fiction Award:
  • Premio Planeta de Novela:
  • Premio Strega:
  • Pritzker Literature Award for Lifetime Achievement in Military Writing:
  • Prix Goncourt:
  • Pulitzer Prize for Fiction: Colson Whitehead for The Underground Railroad
  • Pulitzer Prize for Poetry: Tyehimba Jess for Olio
  • RBC Taylor Prize: Ross King for Mad Enchantment: Claude Monet and the Painting of the Water Lilies
  • Rogers Writers' Trust Fiction Prize: David Chariandy, Brother
  • Russian Booker Prize:
  • Scotiabank Giller Prize: Michael Redhill, Bellevue Square
  • Golden Wreath of Struga Poetry Evenings:
  • Walter Scott Prize: Sebastian Barry for Days Without End
  • W.Y. Boyd Literary Award for Excellence in Military Fiction:
  • Zbigniew Herbert International Literary Award: Breyten Breytenbach
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