A red outline of a speech bubble, open at the top with a pointed tail at the bottom left, is displayed against a white background.
    • U.S. Free Expression
      • Book Bans
      • Campus Free Speech
      • Disinformation
      • Educational Censorship
      • Online Abuse & Digital Safety
      • Supporting Journalists
    • Global Free Expression
      • Preserving Russian Independent Media
      • Writers at Risk Advocacy
      • Countries
    • A scroll labeled Bill of Rights is being put through a metal meat grinder, coming out the other end as shredded pieces, set against a solid red background.Free Speech Under Fire

      The Administration promised free expression. The results were anything but more freedom.

      A Five-Alarm Fire for Free Speech
    • Stacks of colorful books are shown in front of a chalkboard with text reading, “22,810 instances of books banned in U.S. public schools, 2021–2025.”.Book Bans Continue to Spread

      With more than 22K instances since 2021, the bans have become normalized.

      The Normalization of Book Banning
    • Signature Events
      • Authors' Evenings
      • Banned Books Week
      • Literary Awards Ceremony
      • PEN America Literary Gala
      • PEN World Voices Festival
    • Upcoming Events
      • View All Events
    • A promotional graphic for a PEN Out Loud event featuring author Kiran Desai. Her portrait is shown next to the cover of her book The Loneliness of Sonia and Sunny, with the Strand Bookstore logo in the corner.Kiran Desai on her latest, Sonia and Sunny

      Thu. December 4 at The Strand Bookstore in NYC

      Kiran Desai in NYC
    • Literary Programs
      • Fellowships, Workshops & Trainings
      • Prison and Justice Writing
      • Translation
      • The Writers Room
    • Grants & Awards
      • Literary Awards
      • Literary Grants
      • U.S. Writers Aid Initiative
    • The PEN/Robert J. Dau Short Story Prize for Emerging Writers

      The PEN/Robert J. Dau Short Story Prize for Emerging Writers recognizes 12 emerging writers each year for their debut short story

      Submissions are open through November 25, 2025
    • Resources
      • Book Ban Resources
      • Campus Free Speech Guide
      • Facts Forward: Helping Journalists Combat Disinformation
      • Online Harassment Field Manual
      • See All
    • Browse by Type
      • Blogs & Commentary
      • Interviews
      • Press Releases
      • Reports
      • Weekly Roundup
      • All Articles
    • Browse by Topic
      • Book Bans
      • Global Free Expression
      • U.S. Free Expression
    • Latest Book Ban Data Released

      Local censorship tactics are being adopted on the state and federal levels

      The Normalization of Book Banning
    • Who We Are
      • About
      • Board of Trustees
      • Careers
      • Digital Archive
      • History of PEN
      • Staff
    • Offices & Chapters
      • Florida
      • Los Angeles
      • New York Office
      • PEN Across America
      • Washington, D.C.
    • Membership
      • Membership
      • Gift a PEN America Membership
      • Children’s and Young Adult Books Committee
      • Translation Committee
      • Writers in the Schools Committee
    • Support Free Expression
      • Become a PEN America Young Patron
      • Donate Now
      • Shop PEN America Originals
    • Newsletters
      • Subscribe to PEN America News
      • Subscribe to Works of Justice
    • A stack of books wrapped in caution tape, a hand holding a pen, voting booths, and a hand with a megaphone. Text reads: Take Action to Fight Book Bans with a red arrow.Updates on the latest advocacy actions

      We invite readers, authors, educators, librarians, and everyone who opposes censorship to get involved>>

      Join the fight for the Freedom to Read
Join Donate Now

Join Donate Now

Open search
Home / 2018 PEN Open Book Award

2018 PEN Open Book Award

Literary Awards
Literary Awards Honorees

May 29, 2018
  • Share 2018 PEN Open Book Award to Facebook Facebook
  • Share 2018 PEN Open Book Award to X X
  • Share 2018 PEN Open Book Award to Threads Threads
  • Share 2018 PEN Open Book Award to LinkedIn LinkedIn
  • Copy 2018 PEN Open Book Award to clipboard Copy Link
    https://pen.org/2018-pen-open-book-award/
    Event URL copied to clipboard

The PEN Open Book Award, formerly the Beyond Margins Awards, invites submissions of book-length writings by authors of color, published in the United States during the current calendar year. Works of fiction, literary nonfiction, biography/memoir, poetry, and other works of literary character are strongly preferred. The award confers a $5,000 prize upon an author of color. U.S. residency or citizenship is not required.

Alexis Okeowo, A Moonless, STarless Sky (Hachette)

Winner of the 2018 PEN Open Book Award

From the judges’ citation: “In A Moonless, Starless Sky, journalist Alexis Okeowo humanizes the lives behind the headlines, transforming often one-dimensional news stories from the African continent into narratives of endurance and survival. A young Ugandan couple escapes the Lord’s Army; a Mauritanian activist battles the ancient practice of slavery; locals fight back against Boko Haram in Nigeria; in Somalia, young women pursue their dreams of playing basketball despite religious edicts. These are narratives of everyday people confronting unimaginable challenges where one’s very existence becomes an act of resistance. Okeowo’s reporting demonstrates the multiplicity of human resilience and regeneration in impossible times. In a time when our own leaders conflate poverty with personal character, we can think of no more important book. The individuals showcased in A Moonless, Starless Sky are among the best and brightest anywhere in the world.”

ALEXIS OKEOWO joined The New Yorker as a staff writer in 2015. Her work has also been anthologized in The Best American Sports Writing (2017) and The Best American Travel Writing (2017). She has been awarded fellowships and grants from New America, the Alicia Patterson Foundation, the Pulitzer Center on Crisis Reporting, and the International Reporting Project. She has previously contributed to The New York Times Magazine, Bloomberg Businessweek, and the Financial Times.

Reviews & Praise

“The narrative or context given for suffering is what determines survival. The feeling of selfhood of those who have endured trauma is shaped by the gaze of others as much as their experience. Vital to their own sense of self, to their resilience, is an ability to frame their own narrative, something notably done by all the women and men in “A Moonless, Starless Sky.” Okeowo has taken their stories, crafted them in all their courage and complexity and placed them at the center of the story of what it is to be human.”–The New York Times Book Review

Excerpt

“What are the ethics of resisting? When extreme circumstances are forced upon a person, what is she allowed to do to survive? Can she commit apostasy as a religious person, or kill a relative? The answers are complex, possibly unknowable. The idea of survival becomes hazy: It can mean more than just staying alive; it can mean leading the life she feels entitled to have.”

+

Read more from A MOONLESS, STARLESS SKY…

2018 Finalists

My Soul Looks Back: A Memoir, Jessica B. Harris (Scribner)
IndieBound | Amazon

Augustown, Kei Miller (Pantheon)
IndieBound | Amazon

Lessons on Expulsion: Poems, Erika L. Sánchez (Graywolf Press)
IndieBound | Amazon

Ordinary Beast: Poems, Nicole Sealey (Ecco)
IndieBound | Amazon

2018 Judges

EDUARDO C. CORRAL is the son of Mexican immigrants. His debut collection of poetry, Slow Lightning, won the Yale Younger Poets Prize in 2011. He has received numerous honors and awards, including the Discovery/The Nation Award, the J. Howard and Barbara M.J. Wood Prize from Poetry Magazine, a Whiting Writers’ Award, the Holmes National Poetry Prize from Princeton University and a fellowship from the National Endowment for the Arts.
KAITLYN GREENIDGE is the author of the critically acclaimed debut novel We Love You, Charlie Freeman. Her work has appeared in The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal, Lenny Letter, The Believer, American Short Fiction, The Virginia Quarterly, Guernica, and other places. She is the recipient of fellowships from the National Endowment for the Arts, The Whiting Foundation and other prizes. She is a contributing writer at Lenny Letter and currently lives in Brooklyn.
QUAN BARRY is the author of four books of poetry and the novel She Weeps Each Time You’re Born. She has received two NEA Fellowships in both fiction and poetry, and she currently directs the MFA Program in Creative Writing at the University of Wisconsin-Madison.

Submission Guidelines

Submissions for the 2019 awards cycle will open on June 1, 2018. Please note that PEN only accepted submissions from publishers or literary agents. Authors were not to submit their own book for this award.

ELIGIBILITY

    • A candidate’s work must have been published in the United States by a trade publisher between January 1, 2018 and December 31, 2018.
    • Open to authors of color who have not received wide media coverage.
    • Works of fiction, literary nonfiction, biography/memoir, poetry, and other works of literary character were strongly preferred.
    • U.S. residency or citizenship is not required.

VISIT THE SUBMISSION PAGE

Up Next

  • Literary Awards

    Announcing the 2014 PEN Literary Award Winners

    Wednesday July 30

    Read More
  • Literary Awards

    Recommended Reading: Diversity in Literature

    Tuesday May 27
    PEN America

    Read More
View All
PEN America logo and tagline
  • Bluesky
  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • LinkedIn
  • Threads
  • TikTok
  • X
  • YouTube

PEN America

  • PEN America New York
  • PEN America Los Angeles
  • PEN America Washington, DC
  • PEN America Florida

Quick Links

  • Press Releases
  • Careers
  • Events
  • Blogs & Commentary
  • Financials
  • Research & Reports
  • Privacy Policy

Support Our Work

Help protect the freedom to write, read, and learn by donating to PEN America today.

Donate Now

Copyright © 2025 PEN America. All rights reserved | Privacy Policy