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Arts & Culture

SU alumnus named a National Book Award finalist

Wednesday, October 17, 2012, By Rob Enslin
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alumniAwardsCollege of Arts and Sciences

sheinkin黑料不打烊 alumnus Steve Sheinkin 鈥90 has been named a finalist in the Young People鈥檚 Literature category of the 2012 National Book Awards. A former international relations major in The College of Arts and Sciences, Sheinkin was nominated for 鈥淏omb: The Race to Build鈥攁nd Steal鈥攖he World’s Most Dangerous Weapon鈥 (Flash Point, 2012), a factually accurate account about the making of the atomic bomb.聽

Sheinkin and 19 other finalists will be recognized at the National Book Awards Ceremony on聽Nov. 14 at Capriani Wall Street in New York City.

鈥淚 had no idea I was even nominated for the award,鈥 says Sheinkin. 鈥淲hen the book came out in September, I just put it out of my head–until I found out my publisher submitted it for consideration.鈥

A self-described international spy thriller, 鈥淏omb鈥 opens with German scientists discovering how to split uranium atoms and, thus, create the world鈥檚 most formidable weapon. When they begin sharing their findings with colleagues around the globe, World War II breaks out鈥攁nd the race is on to build the atomic bomb.

鈥淏omb鈥 uniquely weaves together three story lines: the development of the American bomb project, led by Robert Oppenheimer, at the mountaintop lab of Los Alamos in New Mexico; the Soviet Union鈥檚 attempt to infiltrate Los Alamos and steal American bomb-making secrets; and the equally important race to stop Adolf Hitler from getting his hands on the bomb.

鈥淭he source material was so rich and the cast of potential characters was so vast that this book could have been hundreds of pages long,鈥 says Sheinkin. 鈥淭he challenge was deciding what to leave out.鈥

A former textbook writer, Sheinkin says he wrote 鈥淏omb鈥 partly out of his love for spy thrillers and partly out of his disdain for history textbooks. (鈥淚 remember being bored by them as a teenager,鈥 he says of the latter.) That he is a nonfiction writer by trade and 鈥渃an鈥檛 just make stuff up鈥 makes the readability of 鈥淏omb鈥 all the more impressive.

The key, says Sheinkin, is finding the right story and then playing up elements that appeal to young readers: a clear, fast-paced style; high-stakes action; quirky characters; and snappy dialogue. 鈥淏omb鈥 has been praised for its 鈥減rodigious research and storytelling skill鈥 (Kirkus Book Reviews) and for 鈥渕aintaining the pace of a thriller without betraying history 鈥 or skipping over science鈥 (The Horn Book).

鈥淚 guess I鈥檓 nervous about losing readers, if I don鈥檛 keep things moving,鈥 he says.

Sheinkin is also author of 鈥淭he Notorious Benedict Arnold: A True Story of Adventure, Heroism and Treachery鈥 (Flash Point, 2010), winner of the Young Adult Library Services Association Award for Excellence in Nonfiction and The Boston Globe-Horn Book Award for Nonfiction.

He attributes much of his literary prowess to SU, where he took creative writing courses with Tobias Wolff. 鈥淭obias was a good teacher and, probably more than anyone, taught me how to get right to the story,鈥 adds Sheinkin.

Another NBA finalist with SU ties is Junot D铆az, a former English professor now on the writing faculty of Massachusetts Institute of Technology. D铆az was nominated in the fiction category for 鈥淭his Is How You Lose Her鈥 (Riverhead Books, 2012), which also helped earn him a MacArthur 鈥淕enius鈥 Award.

 

  • Author

Rob Enslin

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