Historian Charles King wins Francis Parkman Prize
NEW YORK — Charles King’s “Gods of the Upper Air,” a group biography on such groundbreaking anthropologists as Franz Boas, Margaret Mead and Zora Neale Hurston, has received a prominent history award. Frances Fitzgerald won the first-ever Tony Horwitz Prize, established after the celebrated historian and journalist died last year.
Also Tuesday, Robert Colby’s “The Continuance of an Unholy Traffic: Slave Trading in the Civil War South” was given the Allan Nevins Prize for outstanding doctoral dissertation.
The awards were announced by the Society of American Historians, based at Columbia University.
King’s book won the Francis Parkman Prize, named for the 19th century historian and awarded for literary and scholarly achievement. Previous recipients include Robert A. Caro, David W. Blight and Eric Foner.