The Confessions of Nat Turner, novel by William Styron, published in 1967 and awarded the Pulitzer Prize for fiction in 1968. A fictional account of the Virginia slave revolt of 1831, the novel is narrated by the leader of the rebellion. Styron based The Confessions of Nat Turner on a pamphlet of the same title published in Virginia shortly after the revolt, but he took many liberties in developing Turner’s character. Styron’s Turner is a man of moral depth and farseeing vision who is nevertheless a bitter, self-denying, sexually repressed man who cannot attain either physical or spiritual freedom. Not surprisingly, the book generated controversy, primarily among black critics who objected to the white author’s attempt to speak in the voice of a black slave. These critics also accused Styron of falsifying historical facts and misrepresenting Turner himself, and in 1968 a book of essays appeared called William Styron’s Nat Turner: Ten Black Writers Respond. Styron answered in his own defense and was supported by several eminent historians.