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National Book Award nominees announced

NEW YORK, Oct. 13 (UPI) -- The short list for this year's National Book Awards is dominated by historical novels and first-time nominees.

The National Book Awards are given to U.S. authors for works published between December 2004 and November of this year. The winners will be announced Nov. 16.

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The only previous winner among the fiction finalists is E.L. Doctorow, who is nominated for "The March."

Other fiction nominees announced Wednesday are "Holy Skirts," by René Steinke; "Europe Central" by William T. Vollmann; "Trance" by Christopher Sorrentino; and "Veronica" by Mary Gaitskill.

Joan Didion leads the list of non-fiction nominees with "The Year of Magical Thinking," an account of her husband's death and daughter's illness. The other non-fiction finalists are "102 Minutes: The Untold Story of the Fight to Survive Inside the Twin Towers" by New York Times reporters Jim Dwyer and Kevin Flynn; "Bury the Chains: Prophets and Rebels in the Fight to Free an Empire's Slaves" by Adam Hochschild; "Jean-Jacques Rousseau: Restless Genius" by Leo Damrosch; and "Out of Eden: An Odyssey of Ecological Invasion" by Alan Burdick.

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Pulitzer Prizes winner WS Merwin and John Ashbery are nominated in the poetry division along with Frank Bidart, Brendan Galvin and Vern Rutsala.

First-time novelist Jeanne Birdsall got a nod in the young people's category for "The Penderwicks." Other nominees include Walter Dean Myers for "Autobiography of My Dead Brother"; Adele Griffin's "Where I Want to Be"; "Inexcusable" by Chris Lynch and "Each Little Bird that Sings" by Deborah Wiles.

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