2017 in Australian literature
This article presents a list of the historical events and publications of Australian literature during 2017.
Major publications
Literary fiction
- Peter Carey – A Long Way from Home
- J. M. Coetzee – The Schooldays of Jesus
- Michelle de Kretser — The Life to Come
- Robert Drewe — Whipbird
- Richard Flanagan – First Person
- Sofie Laguna — The Choke
- Alex Miller — The Passage of Love
- Bram Presser — The Book of Dirt
- Kim Scott — Taboo
Children's and Young Adult fiction
- Judith Clarke – My Lovely Frankie
- Zana Fraillon – The Ones That Disappeared
- Morris Gleitzman – Maybe (sequel to Once, Then, Now, After, Soon)
- Andy Griffiths – The Tree House Fun Book 2 and The 91-Storey Treehouse
- Jessica Townsend – Nevermoor: The Trials of Morrigan Crow
Crime
- Sulari Gentill — Crossing the Lines
- Jane Harper – Force of Nature
- Michael Robotham — The Secrets She Keeps
Science Fiction and Fantasy
Poetry
- Michael Farrell – I Love Poetry
- Bella Li – Argosy
- Alan Wearne – These Things Are Real
- Fiona Wright – Domestic Interiors
Drama
Biographies
- Judith Brett — The Enigmatic Mr Deakin
Non-fiction
- Peter FitzSimons – Burke and Wills: The Triumph and Tragedy of Australia's Most Famous Explorers
- Kate Grenville – The Case Against Fragrance
- Alexis Wright – Tracker
Awards and honours
Note: these awards were presented in the year in question.
Lifetime achievement
Award | Author |
---|---|
Patrick White Award[1] | Tony Birch |
National
Award | Category | Author | Title | Publisher |
---|---|---|---|---|
The Australian/Vogel Literary Award[2] | Marija Peričić | The Lost Pages | Allen & Unwin | |
Miles Franklin Award[3] | Josephine Wilson | Extinctions | UWA Publishing | |
Prime Minister's Literary Awards[4] | Fiction | Ryan O'Neill | Their Brilliant Careers | Black Inc |
New South Wales Premier's Literary Awards[5] | Fiction | Heather Rose | The Museum of Modern Love | Allen & Unwin |
Queensland Literary Awards[6] | Fiction | Melissa Ashley | The Birdman’s Wife | Affirm Press |
Stella Prize[7] | Heather Rose | The Museum of Modern Love | Allen & Unwin | |
Victorian Premier's Literary Award[8] | Fiction | Georgia Blain | Between a Wolf and a Dog | Scribe |
National
Award | Category | Author | Title | Publisher |
---|---|---|---|---|
Children's Book of the Year Award[9] | Older Readers | Claire Zorn | One Would Think the Deep | UQP |
Younger Readers | Trace Balla | Rockhopping | Allen & Unwin | |
Picture Book | Bob Graham | Home in the Rain | Walker Books | |
Early Childhood | Johanna Bell, illus. Dion Beasley | Go Home, Cheeky Animals! | Allen & Unwin | |
New South Wales Premier's Literary Awards[5] | Children's | Leanne Hall | Iris and the Tiger | Text Publishing |
Young People's | James Roy and Noël Zihabamwe | One Thousand Hills | Omnibus Books, Scholastic Australia | |
Victorian Premier's Literary Award[8] | Young Adult Fiction | Randa Abdel-Fattah | When Michael Met Mina | Pan Australia |
International
Award | Author | Title | Publisher |
---|---|---|---|
CWA Gold Dagger Award[10] | Jane Harper | The Dry | Pan Australia |
National
Award | Category | Author | Title | Publisher |
---|---|---|---|---|
Davitt Award[11] | Novel | Jane Harper | The Dry | Pan Australia |
Ned Kelly Award[12] | Novel | Adrian McKinty | Police at the Station and They Don't Look Friendly | Seventh Street Books |
First novel | Jane Harper | The Dry | Pan Australia | |
Science Fiction
Award | Category | Author | Title | Publisher |
---|---|---|---|---|
Aurealis Award[13] | Sf Novel | Jane Rawson | From the Wreck | Transit Lounge |
Sf Short Story | Garth Nix | "Conversations with an Armoury" | Solaris (Infinity Wars) | |
Fantasy Novel | Jay Kristoff | Godsgrave | HarperCollins Publishers | |
Fantasy Short Story | Tansey Rayner Roberts | "The Curse is Come Upon Me, Cried" | Please Look After This Angel & Other Winged Stories (self-published) | |
Horror Novel | Lois Murphy | Soon | Transit Lounge | |
Horror Short Story | J Ashley-Smith | "Old Growth" | IFWG Publishing Australia (SQ Mag 31) | |
Young Adult Novel | Cally Black | In the Dark Spaces | Hardie Grant Egmont | |
Young Adult Short Story | Tansey Rayner Roberts | "Girl Reporter" | Girl Reporter (Book Smugglers) | |
Ditmar Award[14] | Novel | Kaaron Warren | The Grief Hole | IWFG Publishing Australia |
Best Novella or Novelette | Tansey Rayner Roberts | "Did We Break the End of the World?" | Defying Doomsday (Twelfth Planet Press) | |
Best Short Story | Cat Sparks | "No Fat Chicks" | In Your Face (TableCroft Publishing) | |
Non-Fiction
Award | Category | Author | Title | Publisher |
---|---|---|---|---|
National Biography Award[15] | Biography | Tom D C Roberts | Before Rupert: Keith Murdoch and the Birth of a Dynasty | UQP |
New South Wales Premier's Literary Awards[5] | Non-Fiction | Thornton McCamish | Our Man Elsewhere: In Search of Alan Moorehead | Black Inc |
New South Wales Premier's History Awards[16] | Australian History | Mark McKenna | From the Edge: Australia’s Lost Histories | Melbourne University Publishing |
Community and Regional History | Peter Hobbins, Ursula K Frederick and Anne Clarke | Stories from the Sandstone: Quarantine Inscriptions from Australia’s Immigrant Past | Arbon Publishing | |
General History | Sandra Wilson, Robert Cribb, Beatrice Trefalt and Dean Aszkielowicz | Japanese War Criminals: The Politics of Justice after the Second World War | Columbia University Press | |
Queensland Literary Awards[6] | Non-Fiction | Cathy McLennan | Saltwater | University of Queensland Press |
Victorian Premier's Literary Award[8] | Non-fiction | Madeline Gleeson | Offshore: Behind the Wire on Manus and Nauru | NewSouth Publishing |
Poetry
Award | Author | Title | Publisher |
---|---|---|---|
New South Wales Premier's Literary Awards[5] | Peter Boyle | Ghostspeaking | Vagabond Press |
Victorian Premier's Literary Award[8] | Maxine Beneba Clarke | Carrying the World | Hachette Australia |
Drama
Award | Category | Author | Title | Publisher |
---|---|---|---|---|
New South Wales Premier's Literary Awards[5] | Script | Shirley Birse | The Code, Series 2, Episode 4 | Playmaker |
Patrick White Playwrights' Award | Award | Kim Ho | Mirror's Edge | Sydney Theatre Company |
Fellowship | Sue Smith |
Deaths
- 12 January – Jill Roe, historian, academic and author (born 1940)
- 10 March – Bill Leak, editorial and political cartoonist, caricaturist and portraitist (born 1956)
- 9 April – John Clarke, comedian, writer and satirist (born 1948)
- 22 April – Donna Williams, writer, artist, singer-songwriter, screenwriter and sculptor (born 1963)
- 2 May – Michael Gurr, playwright, author, speech writer and screenwriter (born 1961)
- 3 May – Rosie Scott, novelist and lecturer (born 1948)
- 26 June – Jimmy Chi, playwright and composer (born 1948)
- 27 June – Rae Desmond Jones, poet, novelist, short story writer and politician (born 1941)
- 2 July – Fay Zwicky, poet, short-story writer, critic and academic best known for her autobiographical poem Kaddish, about her identity as a Jewish writer (born 1933)
- 3 August – Jack Wodhams, science fiction writer (born 1931)
- 7 November – Sylvia Lawson, historian, journalist and critic (born 1932)
- 1 December – Ken Inglis, historian (born 1929)
References
- "Tony Birch wins 2017 Patrick White Award". Books + Publishing. 16 November 2017. Retrieved 8 May 2018.
- "Marija Peričić's The Lost Pages wins the 2017 Australian/Vogel's Literary Award". Allen & Unwin. Retrieved 8 May 2018.
- Brooks, Lee (7 September 2017). "Miles Franklin Literary Prize winner Josephine Wilson claims prestigious award for Extinctions". ABC News. Retrieved 8 May 2018.
- "Prime Minister's Literary Awards - Winners and Shortlist". Department of Communications and the Arts. Retrieved 8 May 2018.
- "Winners announced for 2017 NSW Premier's Literary Awards" (PDF). State Library of New South Wales. Retrieved 8 May 2018.
- "Queensland Literary Awards 2017 winners announced". Books & Publishing. 5 October 2017. Retrieved 8 May 2018.
- "The 2017 Stella Prize". The Stella Prize. Retrieved 8 May 2018.
- "Victorian Premier's Literary Awards 2017". The Wheeler Centre. Retrieved 8 May 2018.
- "Book of the Year - Winners 2017". The Children's Book Council of Australia. Retrieved 8 May 2018.
- "'The Dry' wins CWA Gold Dagger". Books + Publishing. 27 October 2017. Retrieved 8 May 2018.
- "'The Dry' wins best novel at 2017 Davitt Awards". Books + Publishing. 28 August 2017. Retrieved 8 May 2018.
- "Announcing the 2017 Ned Kelly Award Winners". Australian Crime Writers Association. Archived from the original on 3 September 2017. Retrieved 8 May 2018.
- "2017 Aurealis Awards Winners". Aurealis Awards. Retrieved 8 May 2018.
- "Ditmar Awards 2017 winners announced". Books + Publishing. 13 June 2017. Retrieved 8 May 2018.
- Romei, Stephen (1 August 2017). "Keith Murdoch biography nets award for Tom DC Roberts". The Australian. Retrieved 16 August 2017.
- "Winners of the 2017 NSW Premier's History Awards announced". Books + Publishing. Retrieved 8 May 2018.
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