Miles Franklin Award

Australian literature award From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Miles Franklin Literary Award is an annual literary prize awarded to "a novel which is of the highest literary merit and presents Australian life in any of its phases".[1] The award was set up according to the will of Miles Franklin (1879–1954), who is best known for writing the Australian classic My Brilliant Career (1901). She bequeathed her estate to fund this award.[2] As of 2016, the award is valued at A$60,000.[3]

Quick Facts Awarded for, Sponsored by ...
Miles Franklin Literary Award
Awarded fora novel which is of the highest literary merit and presents Australian life in any of its phases
Sponsored byEstate of Miles Franklin
LocationAustralia
First award1957
WebsiteMiles Franklin Award
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Winners

1957–1969

1970–1979

1980–1989

1990–1999

2000–2009

2010–2019

2020–

Controversies

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Author Frank Moorhouse was disqualified from consideration for his novel Grand Days because the story was set in Europe during the 1920s and was not sufficiently Australian.[58]

1995 winner Helen Darville, also known as Helen Demidenko and Helen Dale, won for The Hand That Signed the Paper and sparked a debate about authenticity in Australian literature. Darville claimed to be of Ukrainian descent and said it was fiction based on family history. Writer David Marr, who presented the award to her, said that revelations about her true background did not "alter a single thing about the quality of the story, it knocks completely out of the water her answers to critics who said it was not historically accurate, that she knows because of direct family experience, which appears to be complete bull----."[59]

Even before the hoax was revealed, Darville’s book was considered anti-Semitic and justified the genocide of Jewish people.[60] It was also later revealed that she plagiarised from multiple sources.[61]

In 2004, judges of the award resigned due to what they viewed as the commodification of the awards.[62]

2022 longlisted writer John Hughes was accused of plagiarising significant sections of his 2021 book The Dogs from Nobel Laureate Svetlana Alexievich's nonfiction book The Unwomanly Face of War. Nearly 60 similarities and identical sentences were found in a comparison of Hughes' novel and the English version of Alexievich's book. The Guardian newspaper also found similarities between incidents described in the books, including the central scene from which The Dogs takes its title.[63] Further investigation found other examples of plagiarism in the novel and that Hughes copied sections of classic texts including The Great Gatsby and Anna Karenina without acknowledging the original source.[64] The book was subsequently withdrawn from competition.

The Stella Prize was created in 2013 as a reaction to the supposed under-representation of women as winners of literary prizes, in particular the 2011 Miles Franklin Award shortlist. However, since 2013, only one man (A. S. Patrić in 2016) has won the Miles Franklin Award.[65][66]

Repeat winners

Shortlisted works

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Shortlisted titles are only shown for the years 1987 onwards. No record has yet been found for any shortlists being released prior to that year. Winners are listed in bold type.

1980s

In 1989, the date changed from the year of publication to year of announcement, so no award was named in 1988.

More information Year, Author ...
Miles Franklin Award honorees (1987–1989)
Year Author Title Result
1987 Glenda Adams Dancing on Coral Winner [32]
Murray Bail Holden's Performance Shortlist
Nicholas Hasluck Truant State
David Ireland Bloodfather
Nancy Phelan Home Is the Sailor
1989 Peter Carey Oscar and Lucinda Winner
Rodney Hall Captivity Captive Shortlist
Mark Henshaw Out of the Line of Fire
David Parker Building on Sand
Janette Turner Hospital Charades
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1990s

More information Year, Author ...
Miles Franklin Award honorees (1990–1999)
Year Author Title Result
1990 Tom Flood Oceana Fine Winner
Janine Burke Company of Images Shortlist
Nicholas Jose Avenue of Eternal Peace
Amy Witting I for Isobel
Peter Goldsworthy Maestro
Tony Maniaty Smyrna
1991 David Malouf The Great World Winner
Glenda Adams Longleg Shortlist[35]
Thea Astley Reaching Tin River
Jessica Anderson Taking Shelter
Carmel Bird The Bluebird Café
Nicholas Hasluck The Country Without Music
1992 Tim Winton Cloudstreet Winner
Brian Castro Double-Wolf Shortlist[67][68]
Robert Drewe Our Sunshine
Rodney Hall The Second Bridegroom
Alan Gould To the Burning City
1993 Alex Miller The Ancestor Game Winner
Brian Castro After China Shortlist[69]
Helen Garner Cosmo Cosmolino
Roger McDonald Shearers' Motel
Janette Turner Hospital The Last Magician
Thea Astley Vanishing Points
1994 Rodney Hall The Grisly Wife Winner
David Malouf Remembering Babylon Shortlist
Roger McDonald Water Man
1995 Helen Demidenko The Hand That Signed the Paper Winner
Jay Verney A Mortality Tale Shortlist[70]
Kate Grenville Dark Places
Richard Flanagan Death of a River Guide
1996 Christopher Koch Highways to a War Winner[40]
Judith Fox Bracelet Honeymyrtle Shortlist[71]
Amanda Lohrey Camille's Bread
Beverley Farmer The House in the Light
Alex Miller The Sitters
Paul Horsfall The Touchstone
Carmel Bird The White Garden
1997 David Foster The Glade Within the Grove Winner[72]
John Scott Before I Wake Shortlist[73]
Robert Dessaix Night Letters
Janette Turner Hospital Oyster
David Malouf The Conversations at Curlow Creek
Robert Drewe The Drowner
Thea Astley The Multiple Effects of Rainshadow
1998 Peter Carey Jack Maggs Winner
Elizabeth Jolley Lovesong Shortlist
Rod Jones Nightpictures
Dorothy Johnston One for the Master
Delia Falconer The Service of Clouds
Richard Flanagan The Sound of One Hand Clapping
James Bradley Wrack
1999 Murray Bail Eucalyptus Winner
Roger McDonald Mr Darwin's Shooter Shortlist
Carmel Bird Red Shoes
Marion Halligan The Golden Dress
Elliot Perlman Three Dollars
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2000s

More information Year, Author ...
Miles Franklin Award winners 2000–2009
Year Author Title Result
2000 Thea Astley Drylands Winner
Kim Scott Benang
Lily Brett Too Many Men Shortlist
Dorothy Porter[a] What a Piece of Work
Amy Witting Isobel on the Way to the Corner Shop
2001 Frank Moorhouse Dark Palace Winner[74]
Peter Carey True History of the Kelly Gang Shortlist[75]
Arabella Edge The Company
Rodney Hall The Day We Had Hitler Home
Matthew Kneale[b] English Passengers
Alex Miller Conditions of Faith
Hannie Rayson[c] Life after George
2002 Tim Winton Dirt Music Winner
Steven Carroll The Art of the Engine Driver Shortlist
Richard Flanagan Gould's Book of Fish
Joan London Gilgamesh
John Scott The Architect
2003 Alex Miller Journey to the Stone Country Winner
Andrea Goldsmith The Prosperous Thief Shortlist
Sonya Hartnett Of a Boy
Kate Jennings Moral Hazard
Thomas Keneally An Angel in Australia
Dorothy Porter Wild Surmise
2004 Shirley Hazzard The Great Fire Winner
Peter Carey My Life as a Fake Shortlist[76]
J. M. Coetzee Elizabeth Costello
Peter Goldsworthy Three Dog Night
Annamarie Jagose Slow Water
Elliot Perlman Seven Types of Ambiguity
2005 Andrew McGahan The White Earth Winner
Sarah Armstrong Salt Rain Shortlist[77]
Steven Carroll The Gift of Speed
Gail Jones Sixty Lights
Charlotte Wood The Submerged Cathedral
2006 Roger McDonald The Ballad of Desmond Kale Winner
Carrie Tiffany Everyman's Rules for Scientific Living Shortlist[78]
Brian Castro The Garden Book
Kate Grenville The Secret River
Brenda Walker The Wing of Night
2007 Alexis Wright Carpentaria Winner
Peter Carey Theft: A Love Story Shortlist[79]
Gail Jones Dreams of Speaking
Deborah Robertson Careless
2008 Steven Carroll The Time We Have Taken Winner
David Brooks The Fern Tattoo Shortlist[80]
Rodney Hall Love Without Hope
Gail Jones Sorry
Alex Miller Landscape of Farewell
2009 Tim Winton Breath Winner
Louis Nowra Ice Shortlist[81][82]
Murray Bail The Pages
Richard Flanagan Wanting
Christos Tsiolkas The Slap
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2010s

More information Year, Author ...
Miles Franklin Literary Award honorees (2010–2019)
Year Author Title Result
2010 Peter Temple Truth Winner
Brian Castro The Bath Fugues Shortlist[83]
Deborah Forster The Book of Emmett
Sonya Hartnett Butterfly
Craig Silvey Jasper Jones
Alex Miller Lovesong
2011 Kim Scott That Deadman Dance Winner
Chris Womersley Bereft Shortlist[84]
Roger McDonald When Colts Ran
2012 Anna Funder All That I Am Winner
Tony Birch Blood Shortlist[85]
Frank Moorhouse Cold Light
Gillian Mears Foal's Bread
Favel Parrett Past the Shallows
2013 Michelle de Kretser Questions of Travel Winner
Annah Faulkner The Beloved Shortlist[86]
Drusilla Modjeska The Mountain
Romy Ash Floundering
Carrie Tiffany Mateship with Birds
2014 Evie Wyld All the Birds, Singing Winner
Richard Flanagan The Narrow Road to the Deep North Shortlist[87]
Fiona McFarlane The Night Guest
Alexis Wright The Swan Book
Tim Winton Eyrie
Cory Taylor My Beautiful Enemy
2015 Sofie Laguna The Eye of the Sheep Winner
Joan London The Golden Age Shortlist[88]
Christine Piper After Darkness
Sonya Hartnett Golden Boys
Craig Sherborne Tree Palace
2016 A. S. Patrić Black Rock White City Winner
Charlotte Wood The Natural Way of Things Shortlist[89]
Peggy Frew Hope Farm
Myfanwy Jones Leap
Lucy Treloar Salt Creek
2017 Josephine Wilson Extinctions Winner[90]
Mark O'Flynn The Last Days of Ava Langdon Shortlist[91]
Emily Maguire An Isolated Incident
Ryan O'Neill Their Brilliant Careers
Philip Salom Waiting
2018 Michelle de Kretser The Life to Come Winner
Eva Hornung The Last Garden Shortlist[92]
Gerald Murnane Border Districts
Felicity Castagna No More Boats
Catherine McKinnon Storyland
Kim Scott Taboo
2019 Melissa Lucashenko Too Much Lip Winner[93]
Gail Jones The Death of Noah Glass Shortlist[94]
Michael Mohammed Ahmad The Lebs
Gregory Day A Sand Archive
Rodney Hall A Stolen Season
Jennifer Mills Dyschronia
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2020s

More information Year, Author ...
Miles Franklin Literary Award honorees (2020–present)
Year Author Title Result
2020 Tara June Winch The Yield Winner
Carrie Tiffany Exploded View Shortlist[95]
Philip Salom The Returns
John Hughes No One
Peggy Frew Islands
Tony Birch The White Girl
2021 Amanda Lohrey The Labyrinth Winner[54]
Aravind Adiga Amnesty Shortlist[96]
Robbie Arnott The Rain Heron
Daniel Davis Wood At the Edge of the Solid World
Andrew Pippos Lucky’s
Madeleine Watts The Inland Sea
2022 Jennifer Down Bodies of Light Winner[55]
Michael Mohammed Ahmad The Other Half of You Shortlist[97]
Michelle de Kretser Scary Monsters
Alice Pung One Hundred Days
Michael Winkler Grimmish
2023 Shankari Chandran Chai Time at Cinnamon Gardens Winner[56]
Kgshak Akec Hopeless Kingdom Shortlist[98]
Robbie Arnott Limberlost
Jessica Au Cold Enough for Snow
Yumna Kassab The Lovers
Fiona Kelly McGregor Iris
2024 Alexis Wright Praiseworthy Winner[57]
Hossein Asgari Only Sound Remains Shortlist[99]
Jen Craig Wall
Andre Dao Anam
Gregory Day The Bell of the World
Sanya Rushdi Hospital
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Longlisted works

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Longlisted titles are only shown for the years 2005 onwards. That was the first year that such a list was released by the judging panel. The number of works included on the longlist varies from year to year.

2005–2009

2005[100]

2006[101]

2007[102]

2008[103]

2009[104]

2010–2019

2010[105]

2011[106]

2012[107]

2013[108]

2014[109]

2015[110]

2016[111]

2017[112]

2018[113]

  • A Long Way from Home, Peter Carey (Penguin Random House)
  • No More Boats, Felicity Castagna (Giramondo Publishing)
  • The Life to Come, Michelle de Kretser (Allen & Unwin)
  • The Crying Place, Lia Hills (Allen & Unwin)
  • The Last Garden, Eva Hornung (Text Publishing)
  • Some Tests, Wayne Macauley (Text Publishing)
  • Storyland, Catherine McKinnon (HarperCollins Publishers)
  • Border Districts, Gerald Murnane (Giramondo Publishing)
  • From the Wreck, Jane Rawson (Transit Lounge)
  • The Restorer, Michael Sala (Text Publishing)
  • Taboo, Kim Scott (Picador Australia/Pan Macmillan Australia)

2019[114]

2020–

2020[115]

2021[116]

2022[117]

2023[118]

2024[119]

Notes

  1. Dorothy Porter's What a Piece of Work is the first verse novel to be shortlisted.
  2. Matthew Kneale's novel is the first by a non-Australian to be shortlisted for the award.
  3. Hannie Rayson's Life after George is the first play to be shortlisted.

See also

References

Further reading

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