Top Qs
Timeline
Chat
Perspective

The Sydney Morning Herald Best Young Australian Novelists

Literary award by an Australian newspaper From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Remove ads

The Sydney Morning Herald Best Young Australian Novelists award was created in 1997 by the newspaper's literary editor, Susan Wyndham and is made annually. The awards recognise emerging writing talent, and are made to writers who are aged 35 years or younger when their book is first published.[1]

The award criteria were relaxed in 2009 to allow the inclusion of short story collections.[2] That year, Nam Le won the award with his short story collection, The Boat.

The judges change regularly, and the number of writers named as "Best Young Australian Novelist" each year varies. Ten were named in the award's first year.

Remove ads

Past winners

Summarize
Perspective

2024[3]

2023[4]

  • Jay Carmichael, Marlo
  • Katerina Gibson, Women I Know
  • George Haddad, Losing Face

2022[5]

  • Ella Baxter, New Animal
  • Michael Burrows, Where the Line Breaks
  • Diana Reid, Love and Virtue

2021[6]

  • Vivian Pham, The Coconut Children
  • Jessie Tu, A Lonely Girl Is a Dangerous Thing
  • K. M. (Kate) Kruimink, Treacherous Country

2020[7]

2019[8]

2018[9]

  • Jennifer Down, Pulse Points
  • Marija Pericic, The Lost Pages
  • Shaun Prescott, The Town
  • Pip Smith, Half Wild

2017[10]

2016[2]

  • Murray Middleton, When There's Nowhere Left to Run
  • Abigail Ulman, Hot Little Hands

2015[2]

2014[2]

2013[2]

  • Romy Ash, Floundering
  • Paul D. Carter, Eleven Seasons
  • Zane Lovitt, The Midnight Promise
  • Emily Maguire, Fishing for Tigers
  • Ruby J. Murray, Running Dogs
  • Majok Tulba, Beneath the Darkening Sky

2012[2]

2011[2]

  • Lisa Lang, Utopian Man
  • Gretchen Shirm, Having Cried Wolf
  • Kristel Thornell, Night Street

2010[2]

2009[2]

2008[2]

2007[2]

2006[2]

2005[2]

2004[2]

2003[2]

2002[2]

2001[2]

2000[2]

1999[2]

  • Georgia Blain, Closed for Winter
  • Bernard Cohen, Snowdome
  • Raimondo Cortese, The Indestructible Corpse
  • Lisa Merrifield, Mrs Feather and the Aesthetics of Survival
  • Camilla Nelson, Perverse Acts
  • Elliot Perlman, Three Dollars

1998[2]

1997[2]

Remove ads

References

Loading related searches...

Wikiwand - on

Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.

Remove ads