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At the end of January, the American Library Association and its RUSA (Reference & User Services Association) division announced the winners of their Book and Media Awards. I’ve posted about these awards annually. The judging is done by librarians, and many historical novels usually land in the winners’ circle. I haven’t participated on committees for these awards, but friends and colleagues have in the past.
The Reading List honors works of adult fiction within eight genre categories. The 2026 winner for Historical Fiction is These Heathens by Mia McKenzie (Random House). I loved this book (read my earlier review) and am excited to see it receiving this accolade. These Heathens is a coming-of-age story in which a Black seventeen-year-old girl from 1960s rural Georgia has her eyes opened to civil rights activism and the wide diversity of life experiences when she travels to Atlanta to seek an abortion.
At the time I posted my review last August, I’d added: “I haven't heard much about this novel in the online historical fiction community and wanted to highlight it.” This award should give the book some well-deserved attention.
On the shortlist for Historical Fiction on the Reading List are these four novels:
Eleanore of Avignon by Elizabeth DeLozier (medieval France)
Happy Land by Dolen Perkins-Valdez (contemporary and late 19th-c North Carolina)
The Last Witch by C. J. Cooke (15th-century Austria)
The Pretender by Jo Harkin (late 15th-century England)
All five (!) were published by Random House imprints.
On ALA’s Notable Books list, among many other works, is Milo Todd’s The Lilac People (Counterpoint), focusing on the queer community in postwar Germany, people who were persecuted by the Nazis, and then, after the war, by the Allies.
The 2026 Sophie Brody Medal, which recognizes Jewish literature, was awarded to Allison Epstein’s Fagin the Thief (Doubleday), which reimagines Dickens’ Oliver Twist through the eyes of Jacob Fagin.
On the Listen List for excellence in audiobook narration is The Buffalo Hunter Hunter by Stephen Graham Jones (S&S), narrated by Shane Ghostkeeper, Marin Ireland, and Owen Teale – a historical horror/vampire novel set on the Blackfeet reservation.
Congrats to all of the awardees!
Compared to previous years, fewer historical novels were among the winners for 2026, so I thought I’d use this space to highlight something else that’s RUSA-related. RUSA has a section called CODES (Collection Development and Evaluation Section), for issues related to collection development, readers' advisory, and publishing. Librarians love their acronyms.
For many years, RUSA CODES has had an annual award for book reviewing, the Louis Shores Award. (Which is slated for potential discontinuation due to ALA’s plans to streamline its operations for financial reasons, but that’s another sad story.) I’ve been involved with the Louis Shores Award at multiple levels: initially as a grateful recipient (2012), then later as a multi-year selection committee member (2019-21) and more.
Adding to his list of recognitions, Ron Charles, longtime book critic for the Washington Post, received the Louis Shores Award in 2018. The committee made an excellent choice. I’m a admirer of his witty, entertaining, and astute reviews, which I always enjoy even if some of the books reviewed wouldn’t ordinarily have matched my interests. As many in the literary community have learned, with shock and sorrow, he and the entire staff of the WaPo’s books section were laid off, along with 300 other journalists with the paper, on Wednesday morning. This is a big loss to literary culture; WaPo’s Book World and Ron Charles’s weekly Book Club newsletter are very highly regarded by so many readers, librarians, authors, publicists, and more. He’s making a new home at Substack, and I’ve subscribed there. He and other fine writers let go from the paper will be getting the support I once gave to my now-lapsed WaPo subscription. If you appreciate high-quality book reviews and commentary, I recommend his site.










