UNCW grad Mott wins prestigious National Book Award

Penguin Random House  AP

Jason Mott’s “Hell of a Book” won the National Book Award for fiction.

A writer from Southeastern North Carolina has won the National Book Award for fiction – one of the literary world’s most prestigious awards.

Jason Mott, a native of Bolton in Columbus County, is a graduate of the University of North Carolina Wilmington’s Department of Creative Writing. He won the award Wednesday for his novel “Hell of a Book,” the fourth novel he has written.

“A lifetime of work, dreams, and tears that somehow led to, and is magically bound within, a single, wonderful little sticker,” Mott tweeted Thursday morning.

“Hell of a Book” alternates chapters between a Black writer on tour to promote a novel titled “Hell of a Book” and a young Black boy called Soot who’s growing up in the rural South. A third character, called The Kid, appears in visions to the writer.

The book appears to be at least somewhat autobiographical. Both the novel’s writer character and Mott hail from Bolton, and the character of Soot lives near Whiteville, also in Columbus County.

In his review of “Hell of a Book” for the StarNews, Ben Steelman wrote that Mott delves into “Black self-loathing, the issues of the Black Lives Matter movement and the question of whether minority writers should only write about ‘Black’ issues.”

Members and graduates of UNCW’s creative writing department were thrilled by the win as well.

“Well deserved,” said department chair Mark Cox. “We are pleased for him and proud of him. It’s a very big deal.”

Mott has both bachelor’s and master’s degrees from UNCW’s creative writing department and also teaches classes there as a distinguished visiting professor. His win is also a win for the department in that “it highlights the work we do here on all sorts of levels,” Cox said.

The National Book Award for fiction has been won by such acclaimed writers as Colson Whitehead, Susan Sontag, Cormac McCarthy, John Updike, Joyce Carol Oates and Ralph Ellison. It confers a measure of prestige and renown upon those who receive it, with the added bonus of increasing book sales.

During the National Book Awards broadcast, “Hell of a Book” was described as “a structurally and conceptually daring examination of art, fame, family and being Black in America” and “playful, insightful and moving, all at the same time.”

In his speech accepting the award, Mott said he “would like to dedicate this award to all the other mad kids, to all the outsiders, the weirdos, the bullied … The ones so strange they had no choice but to be misunderstood by the world and by those around them. The ones who, in spite of this, refuse to outgrow their imagination, refuse to abandon their dreams and refuse to deny, diminish their identity, or their truth, or their loves, unlike so many others.”

Mott’s previous novels are “The Crossing,” “The Wonder of All Things” and “The Returned,” which was a New York Times best-seller and was made into a TV series called “Resurrection.”

National Book Award winners

Tiya Miles was awarded the nonfiction prize for “All that She Carried: The Journey of Ashley’s Sack, A Black Family Keepsake.” Beginning in the 1850s in South Carolina, the book follows the journey of a cotton sack across several generations of women.

Tiya Miles was awarded the nonfiction prize for “All that She Carried: The Journey of Ashley’s Sack, A Black Family Keepsake.” Beginning in the 1850s in South Carolina, the book follows the journey of a cotton sack across several generations of women.

In poetry, Martín Espada won for his collection “Floaters,” which celebrates rebels and dreamers and condemns the poor governmental response to Hurricane Maria in 2017 in Puerto Rico, his father’s home country.

The award in the category of translated literature went to Elisa Shua Dusapin for “Winter in Sokcho,” translated by Aneesa Abbas Higgins, a novel about an uneasy relationship between a French Korean receptionist and a French cartoonist who lands at the guesthouse she works in.

The young people’s literature award went to Malinda Lo for “Last Night at the Telegraph Club,” which judges called an “incandescent novel of queer possibility.” The narrative, set in 1954, follows two young women who risk everything to bring their love out of the shadows.

Karen Tei Yamashita and Nancy Pearl were also recognized with the Medal for Distinguished Contribution to American Letters and the Literarian Award for Outstanding Service to the American Literary Community, respectively.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.