From the lingering sins of a nation's snarled roots to the complexities of mental illness and even to the colorful quest for a name of one's own, the books that round out this year's Kirkus Prize shortlists won't let you easily forget history — on whatever scale it's defined.
In fact, many of them place it squarely at the center of their narratives. Award-season favorites Annie Proulx and Colson Whitehead plumb the depths of America's past, dredging drama from some of its least admirable eras. Meanwhile, Michael Eric Dyson's take on President Obama seeks to seat today's politics firmly in the context of its forebears. For that matter, even the picture books have their fair share to say (and portray) about history, both personal and public.
On Nov. 3, these 18 books will be winnowed to just three — the winners in the categories of fiction, nonfiction and young readers' literature. Each winner will receive a purse of $50,000.
Find the list of finalists — with links to NPR's coverage — below.
Kirkus Prize Shortlists
Fiction
Adam Haslett, 
Imagine Me Gone
 
Joe McGinniss Jr., 
Carousel Court
 
C.E. Morgan, 
The Sport of Kings
 
Annie Proulx, 
Barkskins 
 
Amor Towles, 
A Gentleman in Moscow 
 
Colson Whitehead, 
The Underground Railroad
Nonfiction
Sarah Bakewell, 
At the Existentialist Cafe 
 
Matthew Desmond, 
Evicted: Poverty and Profit in the American City 
 
Michael Eric Dyson, 
The Black Presidency: Barack Obama and the Politics of Race in America 
 
Susan Faludi, 
In the Darkroom 
 
Beth Macy, 
Truevine 
 
J.D. Vance, 
Hillbilly Elegy: A Memoir of a Family and Culture in Crisis
Young Readers' Literature
Sherman Alexie (writer) and 
Yuyi Morales (illustrator), 
Thunder Boy Jr.
 
Ashley Bryan, 
Freedom Over Me:Eleven Slaves, Their Lives and Dreams Brought to Life 
 
 
Russell Freedman, 
We Will Not Be Silent: The White Rose Student Resistance Movement that Defied Adolf Hitler 
 
 
Jason Reynolds, 
As Brave as You 
 
 
Traci Chee, 
The Reader 
 
 
Meg Medina, 
Burn Baby Burn 
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