MINSK, Belarus — In an Oct. 8 story about the Nobel Prize for literature, The Associated Press erroneously reported that the prize had been awarded only twice for non-fiction prior to 2015, to Winston Churchill and Bertrand Russell. The prize also was awarded in 1902 to Christian Mommsen, most noted for his historical writing on Rome.
A corrected version of the story is below:
New Nobel literature prize winner transcends easy categories
Belarusian writer, who has 'mapped the soul' of Soviet people, wins Nobel literature prize
By YURAS KARMANAU
Associated Press
MINSK, Belarus (AP) — With a reporter's eye and an artist's heart, Svetlana Alexievich writes of the catastrophes, upheaval and personal woes that have afflicted the Soviet Union and the troubled countries that succeeded it. Her writings, characterized by plain language and detail so visceral it's sometimes painful to read, won her this year's Nobel literature prize.
She is an unusual choice. The Swedish Academy, which picks the prestigious literature laureates, has only three times before bestowed the award on non-fiction — to Christian Mommsen, Winston Churchill and Bertrand Russell — and had never honored journalistic work with a Nobel.