Professor Wendy Moffat’s A Great
Unrecorded History: A New Life of E. M. Forster was selected as runner-up
for the PEN/ Jacqueline
Bograd Weld Award 2011 for Biography for “a work of exceptional
literary, narrative and artistic merit, based on scrupulous research.” The
world’s oldest international literary and human rights organization, PEN will
celebrate the work of finalists at a reception in New York City in October. Earlier
this summer, Moffat’s book was also chosen as one of four finalists for
Scotland’s prestigious James Tait Black Prize in Biography. The James Tait
Black, established in 1919, is Britain’s oldest literary award; Forster himself
won the Tait Black fiction prize in 1924, for A Passage to India.