

An image spontaneously leapt into my mind – a melding of the Lincoln Memorial and the Pietà. Many years ago, during a visit to Washington DC, my wife's cousin pointed out to us a crypt on a hill and mentioned that, in 1862, while Abraham Lincoln was president, his beloved son, Willie, died, and was temporarily interred in that crypt, and that the grief-stricken Lincoln had, according to the newspapers of the day, entered the crypt "on several occasions" to hold the boy's body. In March 2017, Saunders provided more detail on the background and conception of his novel: The novel was inspired by a story Saunders's wife's cousin told him about how Lincoln visited his son Willie's crypt at Oak Hill Cemetery in Georgetown on several occasions to hold the body, a story that seems to be verified by contemporary newspaper accounts. Many publications later ranked it one of the best novels of its decade.Ĭonception and research Background


Lincoln in the Bardo received critical acclaim, and won the 2017 Booker Prize. The bulk of the novel, which takes place over the course of a single evening, is set in the bardo-an intermediate space between life and rebirth. The novel takes place during and after the death of Abraham Lincoln's son William "Willie" Wallace Lincoln and deals with the president's grief at his loss. It is Saunders's first full-length novel and was the New York Times hardcover fiction bestseller for the week of March 5, 2017. Lincoln in the Bardo is a 2017 experimental novel by American writer George Saunders.
