1989 in literature
This article contains information about the literary events and publications of 1989.
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Events
    
- February 14 – Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, Supreme Leader of Iran (died 3 June 1989), issues a fatwa calling for the death of Indian-born British author Salman Rushdie and his publishers for issuing the novel The Satanic Verses (1988). On February 24 Iran places a US $3 million bounty on Rushdie's head.[1]
 - March 1 – The Berne Convention Implementation Act of 1988 comes into effect in the United States, making the country a party to the Berne Convention for the Protection of Literary and Artistic Works of 1886.
 - April 23 – Leading figures of the theatre mark William Shakespeare's birthday with a street party to oppose the destruction of the recently-discovered archaeological remains of the English Renaissance Rose Theatre and Globe theatres in London.[2]
 - October – The National Library of Norway is established, with a new building at Mo i Rana.[3]
 - December 29 – Playwright Václav Havel becomes President of Czechoslovakia.
 
New books
    
    Fiction
    
- Hanan al-Shaykh – Women of Sand and Myrrh (Misk al–ghazal)
 - Martin Amis – London Fields
 - Piers Anthony – Total Recall
 - Iain Banks – Canal Dreams
 - John Banville – The Book of Evidence
 - Clive Barker – The Great and Secret Show
 - Julian Barnes – A History of the World in 10½ Chapters
 - Thomas Berger – Changing the Past
 - Larry Bond – Red Phoenix
 - Anthony Burgess – Any Old Iron
 - Nick Cave – And the Ass Saw the Angel
 - Tom Clancy – Clear and Present Danger
 - Mary Higgins Clark – While My Pretty One Sleeps
 - Hugh Cook – The Wicked and the Witless
 - Bernard Cornwell
- Sharpe's Revenge
 - Sea Lord (aka Killer's Wake)
 
 - Bryce Courtenay – The Power of One
 - Robert Crais – Stalking the Angel
 - Lindsey Davis – The Silver Pigs
 - L. Sprague de Camp
 - E. L. Doctorow – Billy Bathgate
 - Katherine Dunn – Geek Love
 - Umberto Eco – Foucault's Pendulum
 - George Alec Effinger – A Fire in the Sun
 - Mircea Eliade (died 1986) – Diary of a Short-Sighted Adolescent (Romanul adolescentului miop) (written 1921–1925)
 - Ben Elton – Stark
 - Steve Erickson – Tours of the Black Clock
 - Laura Esquivel – Like Water for Chocolate (Como agua para chocolate)
 - Ken Follett – The Pillars of the Earth
 - Frederick Forsyth – The Negotiator
 - Gabriel García Márquez – The General in His Labyrinth (El general en su laberinto)
 - John Gardner
 - Charles Gill – The Boozer Challenge
 - John Grisham – A Time to Kill
 - A. M. Homes – Jack
 - Robert E. Howard, L. Sprague de Camp and Lin Carter – The Conan Chronicles
 - John Irving – A Prayer for Owen Meany
 - Kazuo Ishiguro – The Remains of the Day
 - Fleur Jaeggy – it:I beati anni del castigo (Sweet Days of Discipline)
 - Randall Kenan – A Visitation of Spirits
 - Elias Khoury – رحلة غاندي الصغير (Rihlat Ghandi al-saghir, The Journey of Little Gandhi)
 - Stephen King – The Dark Half
 - László Krasznahorkai – The Melancholy of Resistance (Az ellenállás melankóliája)
 - Joe R. Lansdale
 - John le Carré – The Russia House
 - H. P. Lovecraft – The Horror in the Museum and Other Revisions (corrected edition)
 - Hilary Mantel – Fludd
 - Javier Marías – Todas las almas (All Souls)
 - James A. Michener – Six Days in Havana
 - Bharati Mukherjee – Jasmine
 - Larry Niven – The Legacy of Heorot
 - Robert B. Parker – Playmates
 - Ellis Peters
 - Giuseppe Pontiggia – La grande sera
 - Terry Pratchett
 - Paul Quarrington – Whale Music
 - Mordecai Richler – Solomon Gursky Was Here
 - Giampaolo Rugarli – Il nido di ghiaccio
 - José Saramago – The History of the Siege of Lisbon
 - Sidney Sheldon – The Sands of Time
 - Dan Simmons – Hyperion
 - John Skipp and Craig Spector – Book of the Dead
 - Danielle Steel
- Daddy
 - Star
 
 - Bruce Sterling – Crystal Express
 - Alexander Stuart – The War Zone
 - Amy Tan – The Joy Luck Club
 - Shashi Tharoor – The Great Indian Novel
 - Rose Tremain – Restoration
 - Jane Vandenburgh – Failure to Zig-Zag
 - Andrew Vachss – Hard Candy
 - Alice Walker – The Temple of My Familiar
 - Robert McLiam Wilson – Ripley Bogle
 - Roger Zelazny
- Frost & Fire (short stories and essays)
 - Knight of Shadows
 
 
Children and young people
    
- Verna Aardema – Rabbit Makes a Monkey of Lion
 - Joyce Barkhouse – Pit Pony
 - Bruce Coville – My Teacher Is an Alien
 - Anne Fine
 - Mark Helprin (with Chris Van Allsburg) – Swan Lake
 - Yoshi Kogo – Big Al
 - Norman Maclean (with Barry Moser) – A River Runs Through It
 - Bill Martin Jr. (with Lois Elhert) – Chicka Chicka Boom Boom
 - David McKee – Elmer
 - Jim Murphy – The Call Of The Wolves
 - Andre Norton (with Martin H. Greenberg and Braldt Bralds) – Catfantastic: Nine Lives and Fifteen Tales
 - Bill Peet – Bill Peet: An Autobiography
 - Robert D. San Souci – The Talking Eggs: A Folktale from the American South
 - Jon Scieszka (with Lane Smith) – The True Story of the 3 Little Pigs!
 - R. L. Stine – The New Girl (first in the Fear Street series of 55 books)
 - Christopher Tolkien (with J. R. R. Tolkien and Alan Lee) – The Treason of Isengard
 
Drama
    
- Herman Brusselmans and Tom Lanoye – De Canadese muur (The Canadian Wall)
 - Jim Cartwright – Two
 - Nick Darke – Kissing the Pope (original title: Campesinos)
 - Michael Wall – Amongst Barbarians
 - Keith Waterhouse – Jeffrey Bernard is Unwell
 
Poetry
    
Non-fiction
    
- Gisela Bleibtreu-Ehrenberg – Angst und Vorurteil
 - Bill Bryson – The Lost Continent: Travels in Small-Town America
 - Rodney Cotterill – No Ghost in the Machine: Modern Science and the Brain, the Mind, and the Soul
 - Stephen R. Covey – The Seven Habits of Highly Effective People
 - Bruno Dagens – Angkor: Heart of an Asian Empire
 - William Dalrymple – In Xanadu: A Quest
 - Cynthia Enloe – Bananas, Beaches and Bases
 - Stanley Hauerwas and William Willimon – Resident Aliens: Life in the Christian Colony
 - Rüdiger Imhof – John Banville: A Critical Introduction, the first full-length appraisal of the work of major turn of the century writer John Banville.[4][5]
 - Tim Jeal – Baden-Powell
 - Bob Kane and Tom Andrae – Batman and Me
 - John Keegan – The Face of Battle
 - Dale Maharidge and Michael Williamson – And Their Children After Them
 - Peter Mayle – A Year in Provence
 - Claudia Moatti – The Search for Ancient Rome
 - Ann Moir and David Jessel – Brain Sex
 - New Revised Standard Version of the Bible
 - Michael Palin – Around the World in 80 Days
 - Harold Perkin – The Rise of Professional Society. England Since 1880
 - Gilda Radner – It's Always Something
 - Dan Topolski and Patrick Robinson – True Blue: The Oxford Boat Race Mutiny
 - V. Vale and Andrea Juno – Modern Primitives
 - Andy Warhol and Pat Hackett – The Andy Warhol Diaries
 - Jeremy Wilson – Lawrence of Arabia: The Authorized Biography of T.E. Lawrence
 - Bob Wood – Big Ten Country
 
Births
    
- July 11 – David Henrie, American actor and screenwriter[6]
 
Deaths
    
- January 4 – Srikrishna Alanahalli, Indian novelist and poet (born 1947)
 - January 8 – Bruce Chatwin, English travel writer and novelist (born 1940)
 - February 3 – John Cassavetes, American actor, director and writer (born 1929)
 - February 12 – Thomas Bernhard, Austrian author (born 1931)
 - March 14 – Edward Abbey, American essayist (born 1927)
 - March 27 – Malcolm Cowley, American novelist and poet (born 1898)
 - April 14 – Laurence Meynell (Valerie Baxter, A. Stephen Tring), English novelist and children's writer (born 1899)
 - April 19 – Daphne du Maurier, English novelist (born 1907)
 - May 19 – C. L. R. James, Trinidad-born American journalist (born 1901)
 - May 20 – Erzsébet Galgóczi, Hungarian novelist, playwright and screenwriter (born 1930)
 - July 31 – Zhou Yang, Chinese literary theorist (born 1908)
 - August 23 – R. D. Laing, Scottish psychologist and author (born 1927)
 - August 26 – Irving Stone, American novelist (born 1903)
 - September 4
- Georges Simenon, Belgian novelist and crime writer (born 1903)
 - Sir Ronald Syme, New Zealand classicist (born 1903)
 
 - September 13 – Aatreya, Telugu screenwriter (born 1921)
 - September 15 – Robert Penn Warren, American poet and novelist (born 1905)
 - September 30
- Horace Alexander, English current-affairs writer and ornithologist (born 1909)
 - Oskar Davičo, Serbian novelist and poet (born 1909)
 
 - October 13 – Cesare Zavattini, Italian screenwriter (born 1902)
 - November 22 – José Guadalupe Cruz, Mexican comics writer (born 1917)
 - December 5 – George Selden (Terry Andrews), American children's author (gastrointestinal bleeding, born 1929)[7]
 - December 19 – Stella Gibbons, English novelist (born 1902)
 - December 22 – Samuel Beckett, Irish-born playwright, novelist and poet (born 1906)
 - December 26 – Paul Jennings, English humorist (born 1918)
 
Awards
    
- Nobel Prize for Literature: Camilo José Cela
 - Europe Theatre Prize: Peter Brook
 - Camões Prize (first award): Miguel Torga
 
Australia
    
- The Australian/Vogel Literary Award: Mandy Sayer, Mood Indigo
 - C. J. Dennis Prize for Poetry: Gwen Harwood, Bone Scan
 - Kenneth Slessor Prize for Poetry: John Tranter, Under Berlin
 - Mary Gilmore Prize: Alex Skovron, The Re-arrangement
 - Miles Franklin Award: Peter Carey, Oscar and Lucinda
 
Canada
    
- See 1989 Governor General's Awards for a complete list of winners and finalists for those awards.
 
France
    
- Prix Goncourt: Jean Vautrin, Un grand Pas vers le Bon Dieu
 - Prix Décembre: Guy Dupré, Les Manœuvres d'automne
 - Prix Médicis French: Serge Doubrovsky, Le Livre brisé
 - Prix Médicis International: Alvaro Mutis, La Neige de l'amiral
 
United Kingdom
    
- Booker Prize: Kazuo Ishiguro – The Remains of the Day
 - Carnegie Medal for children's literature: Anne Fine, Goggle-Eyes
 - Cholmondeley Award: Peter Didsbury, Douglas Dunn, E. J. Scovell
 - Eric Gregory Award: Gerard Woodward, David Morley, Katrina Porteous, Paul Henry
 - James Tait Black Memorial Prize for fiction: James Kelman, A Disaffection
 - James Tait Black Memorial Prize for biography: Ian Gibson, Federico Garcia Lorca: A Life
 - Newdigate prize: Jane Griffiths
 - Queen's Gold Medal for Poetry: Allen Curnow
 - Whitbread Best Book Award: Richard Holmes, Coleridge: Early Visions
 - The Sunday Express Book of the Year: Rose Tremain, Restoration
 
United States
    
- Agnes Lynch Starrett Poetry Prize: Nancy Vieira Couto, The Face in the Water
 - Aiken Taylor Award for Modern American Poetry: Anthony Hecht
 - American Academy of Arts and Letters Gold Medal for Fiction, Isaac Bashevis Singer
 - Bernard F. Connors Prize for Poetry: Jorie Graham, "Spring"
 - Compton Crook Award: Elizabeth Moon, Sheepfarmer's Daughter
 - Frost Medal: Gwendolyn Brooks
 - National Book Critics Circle Award: to The Broken Cord by Michael Dorris
 - National Book Award for Fiction: to Spartina by John Casey
 - Nebula Award: Elizabeth Ann Scarborough, The Healer's War
 - Newbery Medal for children's literature: Paul Fleischman, Joyful Noise
 - PEN/Faulkner Award for Fiction: to Dusk and Other Stories by James Salter
 - Pulitzer Prize for Drama: Wendy Wasserstein, The Heidi Chronicles
 - Pulitzer Prize for Fiction: Anne Tyler – Breathing Lessons[8]
 - Pulitzer Prize for Poetry: Richard Wilbur: New and Collected Poems
 - Whiting Awards:
 
- Fiction: Ellen Akins, Marianne Wiggins
 - Nonfiction: Ian Frazier, Natalie Kusz, Lucy Sante, Tobias Wolff (nonfiction/fiction)
 - Plays: Timberlake Wertenbaker
 - Poetry: Russell Edson, Mary Karr, C.D. Wright
 
Japan
    
- Falcon Award (Maltese Falcon Society of Japan): Andrew Vachss for Strega
 - The Japan Fantasy Novel Award is established, with Ken'ichi Sakemi winning with his novel Kōkyū Shōsetsu.
 
References
    
- Appignanesi, Lisa (February 1, 1990). The Rushdie File. Syracuse University Press. p. 15. ISBN 978-0-8156-0248-4.
 - The Rose Theatre Trust. Accessed 15 July 2014
 - IFLA Office for International Lending (1991). Interlending and Document Supply: Proceedings of the Second International Conference Held in London, November 1990. IFLA Office for International Lending. p. 65. ISBN 978-0-7123-2089-4.
 - Dukes, Gerry (1991). "Reviewed Work: John Banville: A Critical Study by Joseph McMinn". Studies: An Irish Quarterly Review. Vol. 80, no. 319. pp. 309–311. JSTOR 30091627.
 - Kenny, John (July 24, 1999). "Reintroducing Banville" (PDF). The Irish Times. p. 8. Weekend.
 - Editors of Chase's Calendar of Events (May 11, 2011). The Teachers Calendar 2011-2012. McGraw-Hill Education. p. 239. ISBN 978-0-07-183065-2.
 - "George Selden, 60, Writer of Tales Describing a Cricket's Adventures". The New York Times. December 6, 1989. Retrieved December 19, 2006.
 - Brennan, Elizabeth A.; Clarage, Elizabeth C. (1999). Who's who of Pulitzer Prize Winners. Greenwood Publishing Group. p. 245. ISBN 978-1-57356-111-2. Retrieved January 10, 2021.
 
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