Public service
Propublica
The Pulitzer committee Eerde Propublica for the work of Kavitha Surana, Lizzazie Presser, Cassandra Jaramillo and Stacy Kranitz for what the called “urgent reporting on pregnant women who died after doctors urgently needed care for fear of violating the mother’s life in states.”
Finalists The Boston Globe; The New York Times
Breaking News
The Washington Post
The Washington Post won for his “Lighting Reporting of the attempt of 13 July to kill the then presidential candidate Donald Trump,” the committee said.
Finalists Staff of Associated Press; Staff of the News & Observer, Raleigh, NC and the Charlotte (NC) Observer
Research report
Staff of Reuters
The staff of Reuters won because of his “courageously reported exhibition of lax regulations in the US and abroad that makes Fentanyl, one of the world’s deadliest drugs, cheap and generally available for users in the United States.”
Finalists Staff of Associated Press and Frontline; Christopher Weaver, Anna Wilde Mathews, Mark Maremont, Tom McGinty and Andrew Mollica of the Wall Street Journal
Explanatory report
Azam Ahmed and Christina Goldbaum of the New York Times and Matthieu Aikins, contributing writer
The Pulitzer Committee Eerde Mr Ahmed, Mrs. Goldbaum and Mr Aikins for “An authoritative investigation of how the United States sowed the seeds of his own failure in Afghanistan, mainly by supporting murderous militia that brought citizens to the Taliban.”
Finalists Alexia Campbell, April Simpson and Pratereek Rebala of the Center for Public Integrity, Nadia Hamdan van Reveal and Roy Hurst, employee for mother Jones; Annie Waldman, Duaa Eldeib, Max Blau and Maya Miller from Propublica
Local reporting
Alissa Zhu, Nick Thieme and Jessica Gallagher from the Baltimore Banner and the New York Times
Mrs. Zhu, Mr Thieme and Mrs. Gallagher won for a “compassionate research series that recorded the breathtaking dimensions of the Fentanyl crisis of Baltimore and the disproportionate impact on older black men,” the committee said.
Finalists Mike Reicher, Lynda Mapes and Fiona Martin from the Seattle Times; Katey Rusch and Casey Smith, employees, San Francisco Chronicle, in collaboration with the University of California, Berkeley’s Investigative Reporting Program
National report
Staff of the Wall Street Journal
The Pulitzer committee honored the Wall Street Journal for “describing political and personal shifts of the richest person in the world, Elon Musk.”
Finalists Jennifer Gollan and Susie Neilson of the San Francisco Chronicle; Staff of the Washington Post
International reporting
Declan Walsh and the New York Times staff
Mr Walsh and the New York Times staff were honored for their “Revelation of the conflict in Sudan, including reporting on foreign influence and the lucrative gold trade it feeds, and horrifying forensic reports of the Sudanese troops responsible for atrocities and starvation,” the committee said.
Finalists Staff of the Wall Street Journal, in particular imprisoned journalist Evan Gershkovich and his colleagues; Staff of the Washington Post
Feature Writing
Mark Warren, employee, Esquire
The Pulitzer committee honored Mr Warren for “a sensitive portrait of a Baptist pastor and mayor of a small city that died by suicide after his secret digital life was exposed by a right-wing news site.”
Finalists Joe Sexton, employee, the Marshall project; Anand Gopal, contributing writer, The New Yorker
COMMENTARY
Mosab Abu Toha, employee, The New Yorker
Abu Toha was honored for “essays about the physical and emotional massacre in Gaza that combine deep reporting with the intimacy of memoir to convey the Palestinian experience of more than a year and a half with Israel,” the committee said.
Finalists Gustavo Arellano from the Los Angeles Times; Jerry Brewer from the Washington Post
CRITICISM
Alexandra Lange, contributing writer, Bloomberg Citylab
The committee emphasized Mrs Lange’s “Gracious and Genre Expanding about public spaces for families, agile using interviews, observations and analysis to consider the architectural components with which children and communities can thrive.”
Finalists Sara Holdren from New York Magazine; Vinson Cunningham from the New Yorker
Editorial writing
Raj Mankad, Sharon Steinmann, Lisa Falkenberg and Leah Binkovitz of the Houston Chronicle
Mr Mankad, Mrs. Steinmann, Mrs. Falkenberg and Mrs. Binkovitz won a powerful series about dangerous train transitions that held a rigorous focus on the people and communities who were at risk because the newspaper demanded urgent action, “the committee said.
Finalists David Scharfenberg, Alan Wirzbicki and Marcela García from the Boston Globe; Opinion personnel of the New York Times, especially WJ Hennigan and Kathleen Kingsbury
Illustrated reporting and comments
Ann Telnaes van de Washington Post
Mrs Telnaes won for “delivering piercing comments on powerful people and institutions with agility, creativity – and an fearlessness that led to her departure from the news organization after 17 years.”
Finalists Ernesto Barbieri and Jess Ruliffson, contributors, the Boston Globe; Iran Martinez, Steve Breen, Jamie Self and Giovanni Moujaes from Inewsource
Breaking News Photography
Doug Mills from the New York Times
The Pulitzer committee honored Mr Mills for ‘a series of photos of the attempted murder of the then presidential candidate Donald Trump, including One image That catches a bullet that waves through the sky while speaking. ‘
Finalists Photography personnel from Agence France-Presse; Nanna Heitmann, employee, Tyler Hicks, David Guttenfelder and Nicole Tung, employee, of the New York Times
Feature Photography
Moises Saman, employee, The New Yorker
Mr. Saman was honored for ‘his captivating black and white images of the Sednaya prison in Syria who conquer the traumatic legacy of Assad’s martyrs, causing viewers to confront the rough horrors of prisoners and consider the scars on society,’ the committee said.
Finalists Photography personnel from Associated Press; Lynsey Addario, employee, The New York Times
Audio report
New Yorker staff
The New Yorker won for his “In The Dark” podcast, who called the committee “a combination of fascinating stories and ruthless reporting in the light of obstacles from the US Army.” It’s all about the murder of unarmed Iraqi civilians in Haditha.
Finalists Staff of WNYC and Gothamist; Dan Taberski, Henry Molofsky, Morgan Jones and Marshall Lewy van Wondery and Audacy’s Pineapple Street Studios
FICTION
‘James’, by Percival Everett
Mr. Everett’s book won for ‘an accomplished reconsideration of Huckleberry Finn That gives Jim Agency to illustrate the absurdity of racial supremacy and to give a new look at the search for family and freedom, “the committee said.
Finalists “Headshot: a novel”, by Rita Bullwinkel; ‘The Unicorn Woman’, by Gayl Jones; “MICE 1961”, by Stacey Levine
DRAMA
‘Purpose’, by Branden Jacobs-Jenkins
The committee called Mr. Jacobs-Jenkins’ play “A competent mix of drama and comedy that investigates how different generations define heritage.”
Finalists “Oh, Mary!,” By Cole Escola; ‘The Ally’, by Itamar Mozes
HISTORY
“Native Nations: A Millennium in North America”, by Kathleen Duval and “Combee: Harriet Tubman, the Combahee River Raid and Black Freedom during the Civil War”, by Edda L. Fields-Black
This year’s historia category had two winners. Mrs. Duval was honored for ‘a lively and accessible report’ of Indian countries and communities for a thousand years, the committee said. Mrs. Fields-Black won for “a richly structured and revealing report of a slave uprising.”
Finalists “Plantation Goods: A Material History of American Slavery”, by Seth Rockman
biography
“Every living thing: the big and deadly race to know all life”, by Jason Roberts
The committee called Mr. Roberts book “A beautifully written double biography by Carl Linnaeus and Georges-Louis de Buffon.”
Finalists “John Lewis: A Life”, by David Greenberg; “The world she edited: Katharine S. White at The New Yorker” by Amy Reading
Memoirs or autobiography
“Feeding Ghosts: a graphic memoirs”, by Tessa Hulls
The Pulitzer Committee Eerde Mrs Hulls’s graphic memoirsdescribing as “an influential work of literary art and discovery of which the illustrations bring three generations of Chinese women to life.”
Finalists “Fi: a memoir of my son”, by Alexandra Fuller; “I heard her name my name: a memoir of transition”, by Lucy Sante
poetry
‘New and selected poems’, by Marie Howe
The committee emphasized a collection of Mrs Howe’s “from decades of work that the everyday modern experience for proof of our shared loneliness, mortality and holiness.”
Finalists ‘An Authentic Life’, by Jennifer Chang; “Bluff: Poems,” by Danez Smith
General non -fiction
“To the success of our hopeless cause: the many lives of the Soviet -Dissident Movement”, by Benjamin Nathans
Mr. Nathans book Won because of his “miraculously investigated and revealed history of Soviet -abnormal opinions,” said the Pulitzer committee.
Finalists “Until I find you: disappeared children and compelling adoptions in Guatemala”, by Rachel Nolan; And “I am on the hit list: the murder of a journalist and the rise of autocracy in India”, by Rollo Romig.
MUSIC
‘Sky Islands’, by Susie Ibarra
A composer and percussionist, Mrs. Ibarra was honored for her musical tribute to ecosystems and biodiversity. The committee wrote that the work of the artist “challenges the idea of the compositive voice by interweaving the in -depth musicality and improvising skills of a soloist as a creative tool.”
Finalists ‘The Comet’, by George Lewis, Libretto of Douglas Kearney; And “Jim is still crows”, by Jalalu-Kalvert Nelson.
Special quotes
Stone
Mr. StoneA journalist, posthumously, was honored for his ‘groundbreaking work’ about the civil rights movement as the first black columnist for the Philadelphia Daily News, in addition to his role as co-founder of the National Association of Black Journalists.
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