The Peggy V. Helmerich Distinguished Author Award is an American
literary prize awarded by the
Tulsa Library Trust in
Tulsa,
Oklahoma. It is awarded annually to an "internationally acclaimed" author who has "written a distinguished body of work and made a major contribution to the field of literature and letters".[1][2]
History of the award
First given in 1985, with a cash prize of $5,000, by 2006 the prize had increased to $40,000 cash and an engraved crystal book.[3][4] To date, all of the recipients have been English-language writers.[5]
The award is named after Peggy V. Helmerich, a prominent Tulsa library activist, philanthropist[6] and the wife of Tulsa oilman Walter Helmerich III.[7] Before her marriage, under the
stage namePeggy Dow, she had been a motion picture actress,[8] best known for playing the role of Nurse Kelly in the 1950
James Stewart film vehicle, Harvey and for co-starring with
Best Actor Oscar nominee
Arthur Kennedy[9] in 1951's Bright Victory.[10]
The first honoree was writer and longtime Saturday Review of Literature editor
Norman Cousins, with the evening's theme announced as "The Salutary Aspects of Laughter".[4] In 1997, distinguished
African-American historian
John Hope Franklin became the first (and so far only) native Oklahoman to receive the award. While in Tulsa to accept the award, Franklin made several appearances to speak about his childhood experiences with
racial segregation as well as his father's experiences as a lawyer in the aftermath of the 1921
Tulsa race riot.[11][12][13]
In 2004, 88-year-old
Arthur Miller was initially announced as the honoree,[14] but subsequently declined the award when illness prevented him from attending the December award ceremony and dinner; he died two months later.
David McCullough, the 1995 winner, replaced him as featured speaker at the dinner[15] and, later, returned his honorarium to the library.[16][17]
The following year's initial choice to be the honoree was again unable to accept due to illness: Oklahoman
Tony Hillerman, who would have been the state's second native son to receive the award was, ultimately, replaced by
John Grisham.[18][19]Library Journal reported that Grisham donated the monetary prize to his
Hurricane Katrina relief fund, and also used the occasion to research details for The Innocent Man: Murder and Injustice in a Small Town, his non-fiction account of an Oklahoma inmate cleared of murder charges shortly before his execution date.[20] Reporting on Grisham's selection as Hillerman's replacement, a Virginia newspaper called the Helmerich Award the "best literary award you've never heard of."[21]
^Paul Galloway,
"In From The Cold: John Le Carre Faces The Future With A Polished Public Presence", Chicago Tribune, December 21, 1990. ("You wouldn`t expect to find John le Carre in this beautiful city of almost 400,000 in the verdant hills of eastern Oklahoma. But on a December weekend, there he was, tall, patrician, witty, an engaging raconteur, utterly British, sampling the house specialty from a local chili parlor, dining on barbecued ribs, baked beans and other regional delicacies at a country club luncheon, visiting a museum that features art from the American West, addressing a black-tie dinner, and giving a public lecture at the Tulsa City-County Library.")