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Audre Lorde bio
wins Hurston/Wright Legacy Award

Audre Lorde bio
wins Hurston/Wright Legacy Award

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A historical fantasy set partly in Africa and a biography of the late feminist poet Audre Lorde were among the winners Tuesday night of the Hurston/Wright Legacy Awards, given annually to outstanding books by writers of African descent. Winners each received $10,000. "Congratulations to the recipients for their hard work. We look forward to their future work. We have only scratched the surface of what is possible in black literature," Clyde McElvene, executive director of the Zora Neale Hurston/Richard Wright Foundation, said Tuesday.

Maryse Conde's Who Slashed Celanire's Throa? is winner of the fiction prize; the novel takes place at the turn of the 20th century and follows a woman's journey from Europe to the Ivory Coast to her native Guadeloupe and South America as she seeks to discover who scarred her as a baby. The nonfiction winner, Alexis De Veaux's Warrior Poet, is the story of Lorde, a self-described "black, lesbian, feminist, mother, poet warrior" who died of breast cancer in 1992 at age 58.

Other winners were Chris Abani's Graceland for best debut fiction and Tracy Price-Thompson's A Woman's Worth for contemporary fiction. The Zora Neale Hurston/Richard Wright Foundation was founded in 1990 to "develop, nurture, and sustain the world community of writers of African descent." (AP)

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