He does deserve the many Grammys he has received, including a lifetime achievement award,
which he won in 1991. He unquestionably belongs in the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame, into which
he was inducted in 1988 along with the Supremes, the Beatles and the Beach Boys. He is a
wonderful musician, a worldclass songwriter and an enormously influential figure in American
culture. But by awarding the prize to him, the Nobel committee is choosing not to award it to a
writer, and that is a disappointing choice. Yes, Mr. Dylan is a brilliant lyricist. Yes, he has written
a book of prose poetry and an autobiography. Yes, it is possible to analyze his lyrics as poetry.
But Mr. Dylan's writing is inseparable from his music. He is great because he is a great
musician, and when the Nobel committee gives the literature prize to a musician, it misses the
opportunity to honor a writer. As reading declines around the world, literary prizes are more
important than ever. A big prize means a jump in sales and readership even for a well-known
writer. But more than that, awarding the Nobel to a novelist or a poet is a way of affirming that
fiction and poetry still matter, that they are crucial human endeavors worthy of international
recognition. Popular music is such an endeavor too, but, for the most part, it already receives
the recognition it deserves. And apart from a few spoken-word awards, no one would expect the
highest honors in music to go to a writer-we won't be seeing Zadie Smith or Mary Gaitskill in
the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame. The committee probably did not mean to slight fiction or poetry
with its choice. By honoring a musical icon, the committee members may have wanted to bring
new cultural currency to the prize and make it feel relevant to a younger generation. But there
are many ways they could have accomplished this while still honoring a writer. They could have
chosen a writer who has made significant innovations in the form, like Jennifer Egan, Teju Cole
or Anne Carson. They could have selected a writer from the developing world, which remains
woefully underrepresented among Nobel laureates. They could have picked a writer who has
built an audience primarily online, like Warsan Shire, who became the first Young Poet Laureate
of London in 2014. Instead, the committee gave the prize to a man who is internationally famous
in another field, one with plenty of honors of its own. Bob Dylan does not need a Nobel Prize in
Literature, but literature needs a Nobel Prize. This year, it won't get one. From The New York
Times, October 13, 2016 ©2016 The New York Times. All rights reserved. Used by permission
and protected by the Copyright Laws of the United States. The printing, copying, redistribution,
or retransmission of this Content without express written permission is prohibited. "