Colson Whitehead Receives the 2025 St. Louis Literary Award
ST. LOUIS - “Read, read, read to find out what kind of writer you want to be. Write, write, write to find out what kind of a writer you are.” Pulitzer Prize-winning author Colson Whitehead told audiences that to be an artist is a combination of voracious consumption of art and an attitude of “stick-to-itiveness.”
Whitehead received the 2025 St. Louis Literary Award from Saint Louis University on Wednesday, April 9.
St. Louis Literary Award recipient Colson Whitehead speaks with Katrina Thompson Moore, Ph.D., associate dean in the College of Arts and Sciences, on April 9, 2025.Photo by Sarah Conroy.
St. Louis Literary Award recipient Colson Whitehead speaks with Katrina Thompson Moore, Ph.D., associate dean in the College of Arts and Sciences, on April 9, 2025.Photo by Sarah Conroy.
St. Louis Literary Award recipient Colson Whitehead at the Sheldon Concert Hall on April 9, 2025. Photo by Sarah Conroy.
Fran Pestello, Ph.D., received an award from Edward Ibur, executive director of St. Louis Literary Award Programs during An Evening with Colson Whitehead. Pestello was honored for her years of work with the Literary Award programming. Photo by Sarah Conroy.
St. Louis Literary Award recipient Colson Whitehead signs books after a craft talk on April 10, 2025. Photo by Sarah Conroy.
Saint Louis Literary Award recipient Colson Whitehead speaks at Cardinal Ritter College Prep on April 9, 2025. Photo by Sarah Conroy.
St. Louis Literary Award recipient Colson Whitehead speaks with Ron Austin, associate professor of English at SLU, during a craft talk on April 10, 2025. Photo by Sarah Conroy.
Pulitzer Prize winning author Colson Whitehead is the 2025 St. Louis Literary Award Recipient. Photo by Sarah Conroy.
Saint Louis Literary Award recipient Colson Whitehead signs books in the Saint Louis University Museum of Art on April 8, 2025. Photo by Sarah Conroy.
Perseverance was a theme of Whitehead’s conversations. He told an audience of high school students at Cardinal Ritter College Prep that his first attempt at writing a novel was rejected 25 times and his literary agent at the time dropped him.
“My parents wanted me to get a real job,” he told the students, “but I am an artist. I had no choice but to start again. No other job or vocation could make me feel like a whole person. If you have to write, there is nothing else that will fulfill you.”
Whitehead spoke of researching and plotting his books, saying he likes to know where the characters are going to go, before getting into the writing process.
In a conversation with Katrina Thompson Moore, Ph.D., associate dean in the College of Arts & Sciences at SLU, Whitehead told the crowd while his work is varied, he thinks that in the end there are only two genres of novels - things you like and things you don’t.
“The great thing about my job I really love is that if I keep going, and I can salute these different genres and kinds of storytelling that I like, for me that is really neat.”
In a craft talk on Thursday, April 10, Whitehead told Ron Austin, associate professor of English at SLU, that he didn't believe he needs to write every day, but he does set a goal of pages per week when he is writing. That goal helps keep his work from imposing on his life.
“Juggling time is a problem that confronts all artists,” he said. “You have to figure out how to make it work for you.”
Whitehead is the author of the novels “The Intuitionist,” “John Henry Days,” “Apex Hides the Hurt,” “Sag Harbor,” “The Underground Railroad,” “The Nickel Boys,” and “Harlem Shuffle,” among others. He also penned a book of essays about New York City, “The Colossus of New York.”
In addition to the Pulitzer, “The Underground Railroad,” won the National Book Award and the Carnegie Medal for Fiction. “The Nickel Boys” won the Pulitzer Prize, the Kirkus Prize, and the Orwell Prize for Political Fiction.
Whitehead has been a finalist for the PEN/Hemingway, PEN/Faulkner, Hurston/Wright Legacy Award, the National Book Critics Circle Award, the Los Angeles Times Fiction Award and has received the Anisfield-Wolf Book Award.
He has received a MacArthur Fellowship, a Guggenheim Fellowship, a Whiting Writers Award, the Dos Passos Prize, and a fellowship at the Cullman Center for Scholars and Writers. Whitehead was named the New York State Author in 2018 and awarded the Prize for American Fiction from the Library of Congress in 2020.
The St. Louis Literary Award department in SLU Libraries also includes a Campus Read series, which is open to the public; the Undergraduate Writing Award; Literature & Medicine; Inspired By Arts Showcase for High School and College Students; and the Walter J. Ong S.J. Award for Excellence in Graduate Student Research.
St. Louis Literary Award
The St. Louis Literary Award is presented annually by the Saint Louis University and has become one of the top literary prizes in the country. The award honors a writer who deepens our insight into the human condition and expands the scope of our compassion. Some of the most important writers of the 20th and 21st centuries have come to Saint Louis University to accept the honor, including Margaret Atwood, Salmon Rushdie, Eudora Welty, John Updike, Saul Bellow, August Wilson, Stephen Sondheim, Zadie Smith and Tom Wolfe.
Latest Newslink
- ‘A Model Human Being’: SLU Pediatrician Cared for Children with CancerDennis "Denny" M. O'Connor, M.D. (A&S '63, Med '67), professor emeritus of pediatrics at Saint Louis University School of Medicine, died Tuesday, Feb. 3, 2026. He was 83 years old. O'Connor dedicated more than 50 years to pediatric care, specializing in treating children with cancer, blood disorders and infectious diseases.
- SLU Golf and Give Innovation Challenge Set for February 24-25The third Golf and Give Innovation Challenge, led by Saint Louis University's School of Science and Engineering and the Chaifetz Center for Entrepreneurship in the Richard A. Chaifetz School of Business, will offer the SLU community two days of miniature golf on campus while helping to stock the Billiken Bounty food pantry.
- Rottnek Recognized by Catholic Health AssociationFred Rottnek, M.D., professor of family and community medicine at the Saint Louis University School of Medicine, has been named the 2026 winner of the Sister Carol Keehan Award by the Catholic Health Association (CHA). Created in honor of Sr. Carol Keehan, DC, for her work to ensure everyone has access to quality health care, the Sister Carol Keehan Award is given annually to someone who advances the healing mission of Jesus by valiantly advocating for a more equitable and compassionate health system.
- SLU Professor Wins Top Article Prize for Work on Women and ChristianityAmanda Izzo, Ph.D., associate professor of women and gender studies at Saint Louis University, has been awarded the Jane Dempsey Douglass Prize. The award honors the previous year's best published essay on the role of women in the history of Christianity.
- Photo Exhibit Highlighting Work of SLU's Jesuit Worldwide Learning Students Opens Thursday, February 5Unbound, a student photography exhibit featuring the work of Saint Louis University-Jesuit Worldwide Learning scholarship recipients living in Nigeria, Kenya, and Malawi, opens Thursday, Feb. 5. The SLU-JWL program allows marginalized students abroad to pursue a remote B.A. at SLU at no cost.
- The Academy of Science St. Louis to Honor SLU's Vasit Sagan at Outstanding St. Louis Scientists AwardsSaint Louis University researcher Vasit Sagan, Ph.D., a professor of geospatial science and computer science and associate vice president for geospatial science, will be honored by The Academy of Science - St. Louis with the George Engelmann Interdisciplinary Award for Collaborative Science Achievement.









