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Best Art Gallery
Best Concert
Best Dinner Scene In A Play
Best Interactive Dance Performance
Best Leap Of Faith
Best Local Artist--Performing
Best Local Artist--Visual
Best Local Arts Administrator
Best Local Author
Best Local Dance Production
Best Local Theatre Production
Best Movie Theater
Best Mural
Best News About Desert Rock
Best Performance By A Visiting Dance Company
Best Performance Venue--Indoors
Best Performance Venue--Outdoors
Best Public Art Commission



Best Local Author

Barbara Kingsolver

READERS' PICK: A resident of Tucson for some 20 years now, Barbara Kingsolver is a homegrown writer who's hit the literary big time. And deservedly, too: Her novels, beginning with 1988's The Bean Trees and going on to last year's book of essays, High Tide in Tucson, address a wide range of social concerns with an uncommon poetry. They've earned an audience the world over. Putting her money to work, this year Kingsolver established a prize through her publisher, HarperCollins, to scout out and publish works of socially aware fiction by undiscovered writers.

READERS' POLL RUNNER-UP: Dr. Andrew Weil doesn't particularly share Kingsolver's literary gifts, but what he lacks in metaphor he more than makes up in clear prose that non-medical readers of his health books can readily understand. Tucsonan Weil, Harvard-trained and world-traveled, has turned into a national media star for his up-to-the minute pairing of conventional Western medicine with alternative therapies. Both Weil (a UA Medical School professor) and Kingsolver did much for their hometown's literary rep this year by lingering long on The New York Times bestseller list. For months on end, Weil's new book, Eight Weeks to Optimum Health, was on the How-To books list. His earlier Spontaneous Healing was on the paperback list with Kingsolver's essays, High Tide in Tucson.


Case History

1998 Winner: Barbara Kingsolver
1996 Winner: Barbara Kingsolver
1995 Winner: Barbara Kingsolver


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