This article presents a list of the historical events and publications of Australian literature during 2011.
Events
- Four authors are named in the Queen's Birthday Honours: Peter FitzSimons, Susanne Gervay, Roland Perry, and Chris Wallace-Crabbe[1]
 - Thomas Keneally donates his personal library to the Sydney Mechanics' School of Arts[2]
 - Australian libraries and library associations join together to make 2012 the National Year of Reading[3]
 - Australian Booksellers Association (ABA) declares Saturday, 20 August 2011, the inaugural National Bookshop Day[4]
 - Final issue of the "Australian Literary Review" to be published in October 2011[5]
 - Hannie Rayson is the first Australian to be awarded a commission with New York’s Manhattan Theatre Club[6]
 - Friends and family of biographer Hazel Rowley establish funds to commemorate Rowley’s life and her writing legacy via the Hazel Rowley Literary Fund[7]
 - Alison Lester and Boori Monty Pryor are appointed to be Australia’s first Children’s Laureates[8]
 - The University of Technology Sydney (UTS) appoints Robert Adamson to hold the inaugural CAL Chair in Australian Poetry[9]
 
Major publications
Literary fiction
- Tony Birch – Blood
 - Geraldine Brooks – Caleb's Crossing
 - Annah Faulkner – The Beloved
 - Anna Funder – All That I Am
 - Kate Grenville – Sarah Thornhill
 - Gail Jones – Five Bells
 - Jeanine Leane – Purple Threads
 - Gillian Mears – Foal's Bread
 - Alex Miller – Autumn Laing
 - Frank Moorhouse – Cold Light
 - Favel Parrett – Past The Shallows
 - Elliot Perlman – The Street Sweeper
 - Craig Sherborne – The Amateur Science of Love
 - Rohan Wilson – The Roving Party
 - Charlotte Wood – Animal People
 
Children's and Young Adult fiction
- Alexandra Adornetto – Hades
 - Em Bailey – Shift
 - J. C. Burke – Pig Boy
 - Isobelle Carmody – The Sending
 - Ursula Dubosarsky – The Golden Day
 - Scott Gardner – The Dead I Know
 - Steven Herrick – Black Painted Fingernails
 - Andrew McGahan – The Coming of the Whirlpool
 - Melina Marchetta – Froi of the Exiles
 - Vikki Wakefield – All I Ever Wanted
 - Scott Westerfeld – Goliath
 
Science Fiction and Fantasy
- Max Barry – Machine Man
 - Trudi Canavan – The Rogue
 - Peter Docker – The Water Boys
 - Greg Egan – The Clockwork Rocket
 - Will Elliott – Shadow
 - Kim Falconer – Road to the Soul
 - Pamela Freeman – Ember and Ash
 - Richard Harland – Liberator
 - Glenda Larke – Stormlord's Exile
 - Kim Westwood – The Courier's New Bicycle
 
Crime and Mystery
- Alan Carter – Prime Cut
 - Peter Corris – Follow the Money
 - Garry Disher – Whispering Death
 - Kerry Greenwood – Cooking the Books
 - Stuart Littlemore – Harry Curry: Counsel of Choice
 - Barry Maitland – Chelsea Mansion
 - Kel Robertson – Rip Off
 - Michael Robotham – The Wreckage
 
Poetry
- Ali Alizadeh – Ashes in the Air
 - Joanne Burns – Amphora
 - Barry Hill – Lines for Birds: Poems and Paintings
 - John Kinsella – Armour
 - Geoffrey Lehmann and Robert Gray – Australian Poetry Since 1788 (edited)
 - Jaya Savige – Surface to Air
 
Biography
- Julian Assange – Julian Assange: The Unauthorised Autobiography
 - A. J. Brown – Michael Kirby: Paradoxes and Principles
 - Eileen Chanin – Book Life: The Life and Times of David Scott Mitchell 1836–1907
 - Raimond Gaita – After Romulus
 - Mark McKenna – An Eye for Eternity: The Life of Manning Clark
 - Susan Mitchell – Tony Abbott: A Man's Man
 - Christine Nixon – Fair Cop
 - Sue Pieters-Hawke – Hazel: My Mother's Story
 - Alice Pung – Her Father's Daughter
 - David Robert Walker – Not Dark Yet: A Personal History
 - Sarah Watt, William McInnes – Worse Things Happen at Sea
 
Awards and honours
Lifetime achievement
| Award | Author | 
|---|---|
| Christopher Brennan Award[10] | Jennifer Harrison | 
| Patrick White Award[11] | Robert Adamson | 
Literary
| Award | Author | Title | Publisher | 
|---|---|---|---|
| ALS Gold Medal[12] | Kim Scott | That Deadman Dance | Picador | 
Fiction
International
| Award | Region | Category | Author | Title | Publisher | 
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Commonwealth Writers' Prize | SE Asia and South Pacific | Best Book | Kim Scott | That Deadman Dance | Picador | 
National
| Award | Category | Author | Title | Publisher | 
|---|---|---|---|---|
| The Age Book of the Year | Fiction | Fiona McGregor | Indelible Ink | Scribe Publications | 
| Barbara Jefferis Award | G.L. Osborne | Come Inside | Clouds of Magellan | |
| Colin Roderick Award | Gillian Mears | Foal's Bread | Allen and Unwin | |
| Miles Franklin Award[13] | Kim Scott | That Deadman Dance | Picador | |
| Prime Minister's Literary Awards[14] | Fiction | Stephen Daisley | Traitor | Text Publishing | 
| New South Wales Premier's Literary Awards[15] | Fiction | Alex Miller | Lovesong | Allen & Unwin | 
| Queensland Premier's Literary Awards | Fiction | Amanda Lohrey | Reading Madame Bovary | Black Inc. | 
| Victorian Premier's Literary Award | Fiction | Kim Scott | That Deadman Dance | Picador | 
| Western Australian Premier's Book Awards | Fiction | Anna Funder | All That I Am | Penguin Books | 
Children and Young Adult
National
Crime and Mystery
National
| Award | Category | Author | Title | Publisher | 
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Davitt Award | Novel | Katherine Howell | Cold Justice | Pan Macmillan | 
| Ned Kelly Award | Novel | Geoffrey McGeachin | The Diggers Rest Hotel | Penguin Books | 
| First novel | Alan Carter | Prime Cut | Fremantle Press | |
Science fiction
| Award | Category | Author | Title | Publisher | 
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Aurealis Award | SF Novel | Kim Westwood | The Courier's New Bicycle | HarperVoyager | 
| SF Short Story | Robert N. Stephenson | "Rains of la Strange" | Coeur de Lion Publishing (Anywhere but Earth) | |
| Fantasy Novel | Pamela Freeman | Ember and Ash | Hachette | |
| Fantasy Short Story | Thoraiya Dyer | "Fruit of the Pipal Tree" | FableCroft Publishing (After the Rain) | |
| Horror Short Story | Paul Haines | "The Past is a Bridge Best Left Burnt" | Brimstone Press (The Last Days of Kali Yuga) | |
| Lisa L. Hannett | "The Short Go: a Future in Eight Seconds" | Ticonderoga Publications (Bluegrass Symphony) | ||
| Australian Shadows Awards | Novel | No Award | ||
| Long Fiction | Paul Haines | "The Past is a Bridge Best Left Burnt" | Brimstone Press (The Last Days of Kali Yuga) | |
| Short Fiction | Amanda J. Spedding | "Shovel Man Joe" | Shades of Sentience, May 2011 | |
| Edited Publication | Russell B. Farr, editor | Dead Red Heart | Ticonderoga Publications | |
| Collected Works | Brett McBean | Tales of Sin and Madness | LegumeMan Books | |
| Ditmar Award | Novel | Tansy Rayner Roberts | Power and Majesty | HarperVoyager | 
| Novella/Novelette | Thoraiya Dyer | "The Company Articles of Edward Teach" | Twelfth Planet Press | |
| Short Story | Cat Sparks | "All the Love in the World" | Twelfth Planet Press (Sprawl) | |
| Kirstyn McDermott | "She Said" | Morrigan Books (Scenes From the Second Storey) | ||
| Collected Work | Alisa Krasnostein ed. | Sprawl | Twelfth Planet Press | |
Non-Fiction
| Award | Category | Author | Title | Publisher | 
|---|---|---|---|---|
| The Age Book of the Year | Non-fiction | Jim Davidson | A Three-Cornered Life | UNSW Press | 
| Children's Book of the Year Award | Eve Pownall Award for Information Books | Ursula Dubosarsky, illus. Tohby Riddle | The Return of the Word Spy | Viking Books | 
| Davitt Award | True crime | Colleen Egan | Murderer No More | Allen & Unwin | 
| National Biography Award | Alasdair McGregor | Grand Obsessions: The Life and Work of Walter Burley Griffin and Marion Mahony Griffin | Lantern | |
| Prime Minister's Literary Awards | Non-fiction | Rod Moss | The Hard Light of Day | University of Queensland Press | 
| New South Wales Premier's Literary Awards | Non-fiction | Malcolm Fraser and Margaret Simons | Malcolm Fraser: The Political Memoirs | Melbourne University Publishing | 
| New South Wales Premier's History Awards | Australian History | Penny Russell | Savage or Civilised?: Manners in Colonial Australia | UNSW Press | 
| Community and Regional History | Stephen Gapps | Cabrogal to Fairfield City: A History of a Multicultural Community | Fairfield City Council | |
| General History | Shane White, Stephen Garton, Stephen Robertson and Graham White | Playing the Numbers: Gambling in Harlem Between the Wars | Harvard University Press | |
| Young People's | Kirsty Murray | India Dark | Allen & Unwin | |
| Queensland Premier's Literary Awards | Non-fiction | Mark McKenna | An Eye for Eternity: The Life of Manning Clark | Melbourne University Publishing | 
| History | Alan Powell | Northern Voyagers: Australia's monsoon coast in maritime history | Australian Scholarly Publishing | |
| Victorian Premier's Literary Award | Non-fiction | Mark McKenna | An Eye for Eternity: The Life of Manning Clark | Melbourne University Publishing | 
| Western Australian Premier's Book Awards | Non-fiction | Alice Pung | Her Father's Daughter | Black Inc. | 
| Western Australian history | Fiona Skyring | Justice: A History of the Aboriginal Legal Service of Western Australia | University of Western Australia Press | |
Poetry
| Award | Author | Title | Publisher | 
|---|---|---|---|
| The Age Book of the Year | John Tranter | Starlight: 150 Poems | University of Queensland Press | 
| New South Wales Premier's Literary Awards | Jennifer Maiden | Pirate Rain | Giramondo Publishing | 
| Queensland Premier's Literary Awards | John Tranter | Starlight: 150 Poems | University of Queensland Press | 
| Victorian Premier's Literary Award | Cate Kennedy | The Taste of River Water | Scribe | 
| Western Australian Premier's Book Awards | Tracy Ryan | The Argument | Fremantle Press | 
Drama
| Award | Category | Author | Title | Publisher | 
|---|---|---|---|---|
| New South Wales Premier's Literary Awards | Play | Patricia Cornelius | Do Not Go Gentle | Currency Press | 
| Script | Debra Oswald | Offspring | Southern Star Entertainment | |
| Patrick White Playwrights' Award | Award | Phillip Kavanagh | Little Borders | |
| Fellowship | Patricia Cornelius | 
Deaths
- 1 March – Hazel Rowley, author (born 1951)[16]
 - 15 June – Anne Godfrey-Smith, poet and theatre producer/director (born 1921)[17]
 - 20 June – T. A. G. Hungerford, author (born 1915)[18]
 - 2 September – Bernard Smith, art historian (born 1916)
 - 27 September – Sara Douglass, author (born 1957)
 - 4 October – Di Gribble, editor and publisher (born 1942)
 - 8 December – Zelman Cowen, jurist (born 1919)
 
Unknown date
- May – Robert J. Merritt, playwright (born 1945)
 
See also
References
- ↑ Australian Writers Named in Queen's Birthday Honours
 - ↑ Keneally's Library Finds New Home
 - ↑ National Year of Reading in 2012
 - ↑ National Bookshop Day
 - ↑ Australian Literary Review to Cease Publication
 - ↑ Hannie Rayson Wins New York Commission
 - ↑ Hazel Rowley's Literary Legacy
 - ↑ Australia's First Children's Laureates Announced
 - ↑ UTS Appoints Inaugural CAL Chair in Australian Poetry
 - ↑ "Austlit — FAW Christopher Brennan Award". Austlit. Retrieved 10 September 2023.
 - ↑ "Former inmate wins $18,000 poetry prize". canberratimes.com.au. 7 November 2011. Archived from the original on 7 November 2011. Retrieved 10 September 2023.
 - ↑ "ALS Gold Medal — Previous Winners". Association for the Study of Australian Literature. Retrieved 13 January 2024.
 - ↑ "Kim Scott wins prestigious Miles Franklin". ABC News. 22 June 2011. Retrieved 9 August 2022.
 - ↑ ""Prime Minister's Literary Awards - Shortlist and winners: 2021-2008"". Creative Australia. Retrieved 11 January 2024.
 - ↑ ""Fraser the Cold War warrior joins the literati"". The Age, 17 May 2011. Retrieved 30 December 2023.
 - ↑ "Hazel Rowley". AustLit: Discover Australian Stories. The University of Queensland. Retrieved 23 September 2023.
 - ↑ "Anne Godfrey-Smith". AustLit: Discover Australian Stories. The University of Queensland. Retrieved 23 September 2023.
 - ↑ "T. A. G. Hungerford". AustLit: Discover Australian Stories. The University of Queensland. Retrieved 14 September 2023.
 
    This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.