Showing all posts about literary awards
Entries open for 2023 Australian/Vogel Young Writers Award
8 February 2023
The Australian/Vogel’s Award for Young Writers has launched the career of many an Australian author, including Emma Batchelor, Katherine Brabon, and Murray Middleton. Entries are open for the 2023 award, to Australian citizens or permanent residents, who are under the age of thirty-five as of 31 May 2023, the date entries close. To be eligible, manuscripts must contain between fifty-thousand and eighty-thousand words.
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Australian literature, Emma Batchelor, Katherine Brabon, literary awards
2023 Val Vallis Award for unpublished poetry entries open
8 February 2023
Entries are open for the 2023 Val Vallis Award for an unpublished poem, until Sunday 26 February 2023. Named in honour of late Queensland poet, lecturer, and opera critic Valentine Vallis, who died in 2009, the award recognises unpublished works, by Australian poets, of no more than eighty lines.
Dan Hogan, a poet based on the NSW Central Coast, won the 2022 award with a work titled Aduantas.
Update: the 2023 award winner was named on Tuesday 2 May 2023.
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Australian literature, literary awards, literature, poetry
Limberlost by Robbie Arnott longlisted in 2023 Dylan Thomas Prize
7 February 2023
Tasmania based Australian author Robbie Arnott, has been longlisted in the 2023 Dylan Thomas Prize, for his 2022 novel, Limberlost. Established in 2006, the Dylan Thomas Prize recognises the best published English language literary work, written by an author aged 39 or under, globally.
The shortlist will be announced on Thursday 23 March 2023, with the winner being named at the awards ceremony on Thursday 11 May 2023.
Another reason to add Limberlost to your TBR list.
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Australian literature, literary awards, Robbie Arnott
Lystra Rose’s 2023 Victorian Premier’s Literary Awards speech
7 February 2023
Queensland based Australian author Lystra Rose won the Indigenous Writing Award for her debut novel The Upwelling, at the 2023 Victorian Premier’s Literary Awards, which were presented last week in Melbourne. Take a few minutes to listen to her acceptance speech:
I was the first person in my Indigenous family to be counted as human under Australian law. Let me say that again. When I was born I was the first person in my Indigenous family to be counted human under Australian law.
Remarkable words. Read them again.
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Australian literature, Indigenous literature, literary awards, Lystra Rose
Victorian Premier’s Literary Award 2023 winners announced
2 February 2023
The Victorian Premier’s Literary Award 2023 winners were announced at an awards ceremony held at Melbourne’s Wheeler Centre this evening. Twenty-seven titles were included on the shortlist last December, across seven categories. Winners in each category, together with the People’s Choice Award, and Victorian Prize for Literature, are as follows:
- People’s Choice Award: Astronomy, Sky Country by Karlie Alinta Noon and Krystal De Napoli
- Fiction: Cold Enough for Snow, by Jessica Au
- Non-fiction: Root & Branch: Essays on inheritance by Eda Gunaydin
- Drama: The Return by John Harvey
- Poetry: At The Altar of Touch by Gavin Yuan Gao
- Young Adult Writing: We Who Hunt The Hollow by Kate Murray
- Indigenous Writing: The Upwelling by Lystra Rose
- Unpublished Manuscript: One Divine Night by Mick Cummins
- Cold Enough for Snow, by Jessica Au, was named 2023 winner of the Victorian Prize for Literature
The Victorian Prize for Literature is the centrepiece of the Victorian Premier’s Literary Awards, and is valued at A$100,000 making it Australia’s single richest literary prize.
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Australian literature, literary awards
The Dublin Literary Award 2023 longlist
31 January 2023
Seventy books, published in thirty-one countries, have been named on the Dublin Literary Award 2023 longlist. After Story by Sydney based author and filmmaker Larissa Behrendt, Bodies of Light by Jennifer Down, winner of the 2022 Miles Franklin award, and Cold Enough for Snow by Jessica Au, are among Australian titles to be included.
Formerly known as the International IMPAC Dublin Literary Award, before being renamed in 2015, the Dublin Literary Award was established in 1994 to celebrate excellence in world literature. Awarded annually, novels either written in, or translated into English, can be nominated by participating libraries globally. A shortlist of ten book will be announced in March 2023, with the winner being named later this year, in June.
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books, literary awards, literature, novels
More promotion of Australian literary awards benefits authors
28 January 2023
Louise Adler, director of Adelaide Writers’ Week, talking to Katrina Strickland, editor of Good Weekend, laments the lack of wider excitement generated by literary awards in Australia:
“We adore it when our authors win awards but, actually, often they do not translate into sales,” she says, pointing to the way the UK book industry gets behind the Booker Prize longlisted and shortlisted authors. “When the longlist for the Booker is announced the books on it are heavily promoted, booksellers get behind it, publishers get behind it, and then the shortlist is promoted heavily, too. And there’s lots and lots of discussion about them.”
It’s unfortunate Australian literary awards don’t have quite the same buzz surrounding them as the Booker Prize in the UK appears to. While the shortlists, and winners of prizes such as the Stella and Miles Franklin, make headlines when announced, they soon fall out of the news cycle.
No doubt the larger population of the UK, compared to Australia, makes a difference, and Australian authors recognised by local literary awards see a spike in book sales. Still, I doubt it’s anything like the “Booker boost” that writers named on the long and shortlists — and of course, the winner — of the Booker, enjoy.
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Australian literature, literary awards, literature
The Novel Prize for literary fiction 2022 shortlist
21 January 2023
UPDATE: the winners of the 2022 Novel Prize have been announced.
The Novel Prize is a biennial award for works of literary fiction, co-convened by three publishers, Giramondo, Fitzcarraldo Editions, and New Directions, based in Australia, Britain and Ireland, and America, respectively. Earlier this week, eight writers, some published, some not, were named on the shortlist for the 2022 prize:
- Anonymity is Life, Sola Saar
- Aurora Australis by Marie Doezema
- Forever Valley by Darcie Dennigan
- It Lasts Forever and Then It’s Over by Anne de Marcken
- Moon Over Bucharest by Valer Popa
- Palimpsest by Florina Enache
- Tell by Jonathan Buckley
- The Passenger Seat by Vijay Khurana
Some seven hundred entries were received this year’s award. Of the field, Florina Enache is the only Australian writer to make the cut. Australian author Jessica Au won the inaugural Novel Prize in 2020 for Cold Enough for Snow, which was published, as part of the award, in 2022. The 2022 winner will be announced next month, in February.
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Jessica Au, literary awards, literature
The Booker Prize is seeking a name for their award trophy
21 January 2023
Booker Prize organisers are looking for a name for the statuette they present to recipients of the annual literary award, which was originally designed by late Polish-born British author and artist Jan Pieńkowski. The statuette was presented to inaugural Booker Prize winner P.H. Newby in 1969, but by the mid-1970’s winners were receiving a leather bound copy of their book.
In more recent years, recipients have been presented a perplex trophy. Following Pieńkowski’s death in 2022, organisers resumed using the statuette he designed, when Shehan Karunatilaka was named 2022 winner. Entries for suggested names for the statuette close on Friday 27 January 2023.
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Booker Prize, literary awards, literature
The 2023 Indie Book Awards shortlist
19 January 2023
The Australian literary award season (and quite a long season it is), is underway for the year, with the announcement yesterday of the 2023 Indie Book Awards shortlist. Four titles, in six categories, are in contention this year:
Fiction:
- Limberlost by Robbie Arnott
- Horse by Geraldine Brooks
- Seeing Other People by Diana Reid
- The Seven Skins of Esther Wilding by Holly Ringland
Non-Fiction:
- The Book Of Roads And Kingdoms by Richard Fidler
- The First Astronomers by Duane Hamacher, with Elders and Knowledge Holders
- Nothing Bad Ever Happens Here by Heather Rose
- The Ninth Life of a Diamond Miner by Grace Tame
Debut Fiction:
- Wake by Shelley Burr
- All That’s Left Unsaid by Tracey Lien
- Son of Sin by Omar Sakr
- Dirt Town by Hayley Scrivenor
Illustrated Non-Fiction:
- First Nations Food Companion by Damien Coulthard and Rebecca Sullivan
- Big Beautiful Female Theory by Eloise Grills
- Cressida Campbell by National Gallery of Australia
- RecipeTin Eats: Dinner by Nagi Maehashi
Children’s:
- Frank’s Red Hat by Sean E Avery
- Ceremony: Welcome to Our Country by Adam Goodes and Ellie Laing
- Guardians: Wylah the Koorie Warrior 1 by Jordan Gould and Richard Pritchard
- Runt by Craig Silvey
Young Adult:
- Cop and Robber by Tristan Bancks
- The Museum of Broken Things by Lauren Draper
- Unnecessary Drama by Nina Kenwood
- The Brink by Holden Sheppard
The winners will be named on Monday 20 March 2023.
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