Monday musings on Australian literature: Prime Minister’s Summer Reading List, 2023

December is when I start my round of regular end-of-year posts, and a new one I’m adding to the fold is the The Grattan Institute’s annual Prime Minister’s Summer Reading List. The institute is an Australian non-aligned, public policy think tank, which produces readable, reasoned reports on significant issues, like, most recently, the role of hyrdrogen in Australia’s green energy goals and an analysis of the keenly awaited review of the NDIS (National Disability Insurance Scheme).

My focus here, though, is another activity of theirs, their Prime Minister’s Summer Reading List, which they have published annually since 2009. This list, as they wrote on the inaugural 2009 list, comprises “books and articles that the Prime Minister, or any Australian interested in public debate, will find both stimulating and cracking good reads”.

As I wrote in last year’s post, the Institute’s then chief executive, Danielle Wood, said they aimed

to pick books that have something interesting, original, or thought-provoking to say on issues that are relevant to the Australian policy landscape. The books don’t have to be by local writers or about Australia … but they do have to address issues that have relevance in an Australian policy context.

I managed to read, after the event, two of last year’s list, Debra Dank’s We come with this place (my review) and Jessica Au’s Cold enough for snow (my review). Dank’s is an obvious choice, but I love they they also chose something quietly, and perhaps even enigmatically, reflective about life and change in Au’s book.

Here is the 2023 list in their order, with a small excerpt from their reasoning:

  • Anna Funder, Wifedom: Mrs Orwell’s invisible life (on my reading group’s 2024 schedule, Brona’s review): “People don’t become invisible by accident … a powerful case study of the hidden lives of wives whose contributions are downplayed or entirely disregarded”
  • Ellen van Neerven, Personal score: “highlights the disproportionate impact of a changing climate on Indigenous people, the importance to Aboriginal health of story and being heard, and the complexity of gender and belonging, on and off the field. A new and transformative piece of sports writing … an essential read for anyone wanting to better understand sport, community, and power on sovereign land”.
  • Mark Considine, The careless state: Reforming Australia’s social services: “Australia’s social services are doing a bad job of looking after people … impressively summarises the problems, explains how we got here, and shows that what may seem like separate problems have many shared roots”. 
  • Micheline Lee, Lifeboat: Disability, humanity, and the NDIS (Quarterly Essay 91, September 23): “describes how the NDIS’s disempowering, confusing, and bureaucratic processes have worn out the trust of people with disability and their families … [yet] there is a warming tone of optimism running through Lee’s analysis”.
  • Jennifer Pahlka, Recoding America: Why government is failing in the digital age and how we can do better: “Technology is the front door to many government services … But too often, the design of online services is an afterthought, and users are left to grapple with lengthy, confusing, and duplicative processes … [and] bad design can entrench inequalities … “a compelling call to arms for better design and delivery of government services”.
  • Henry Dimbleby and Jemima Lewis, Ravenous: How to get ourselves and our planet into shape: “explores the complex machinations of modern food systems … details how our food choices are influenced by the industries that make our food, and the environment that surrounds us … shows how our decisions about what foods to put in our shopping baskets are subtly but constantly influenced by a vast food system. The consequences are rarely good for us, our health, or our planet”.

So, one biography, one part memoir-history-poetry, an essay, and three specific-issue-focused non-fiction works, with four by Australians, one by an American, and one from the UK. It’s good to see a First Nations author here again, and to see important issues – like disability, the challenges of the digital age, and modern food systems – front and centre in the Institute’s thinking.

I would, of course, love to see a greater recognition of the value of fiction to addressing “issues that have relevance in the Australian policy context”. Fiction has been included in the past, but not often. I wrote a little about some of their choices last year. We don’t know whether the relevant prime minister reads the suggestions, but some thoughtful or provocative fiction might be better summer reading for our poor top politician needing some break?

I could suggest Chris Flynn’s short story collection, Here be Leviathans (my review), and Carmel Bird’s Love letter to Lola (my review), to fill that bill. Short stories are perfect for busy people, and these two collections are entertaining but also offer some real meat in terms of thinking about various issues confronting humanity, including the environment and environmental destruction. Also Tony Burke made a good point about Paddy O’Reilly’s Other houses (Lisa’s review) which was shortlisted for this year’s Prime Minister’s literary awards and which is about a group of people we rarely read about, cleaners. Surely a book about the working life, that is, the battlers, the people whom journalists and politicians this year have constantly pointed out are “doing it tough”. Fiction about such lives would be perfect for our PM.

You can see all the lists, by year, to date at these links: 2009, 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014, 2015, 2016, 2017, 2018, 2019, 2020, 2021, 2022.

If you had the opportunity to make one book recommendation to the leader of your country, what would it be?

22 thoughts on “Monday musings on Australian literature: Prime Minister’s Summer Reading List, 2023

  1. I thought it was a rather shabby fiction list.
    As you say, “some thoughtful or provocative fiction might be better summer reading”.
    And don’t they realise that politicians, especially senior ones get briefings about these issues of importance all the time? It’s not more facts that they need, it’s more feeling.

  2. Exactly what Lisa said. These lists should be fiction to build empathy and human understanding. The first one I’d put on the list is Max Easton’s Paradise Estate, which explores all the socio-economic issues, such as poor working conditions and lack of affordable housing, faced by Millennials

  3. A couple of members of my family depend on the NDIS and they seem to be doing ok.
    Govt people-facing computers though, would seem to be a disaster, looking at you MyGov, not to mention an over-reach in terms of the information they demand and store.
    I can’t recommend any recent Aust fiction (I’ve read so little), but if the PM would just admit that he had actually looked at maps of where our coastlines will be when the sea rises 1, 2, 5 metres, as it will in his lifetime, that would be a start.

  4. Of course I agree about the value of including fiction on themes like this. When I was studying history in uni, it got so that I felt I could predict how well the course was going to unfold (for me, personally), based on whether the prof had included fiction on the reading list.

      • Robert Graves’ Goodbye to all That was the most narrative-driven book on my introductory course’s list, so now that I think about it, the rest were all on later classes’ reading lists. Even now I can’t recall whether GtaT is classed as fiction or non-fiction but I found it very affecting, and not long after went on to read Pat Barker’s Regeneration (which I believe we’ve both enjoyed…well, maybe not “enjoyed”).

  5. Do you know if when your head of government reads a book, it becomes more popular? In the US, people are pretty excited about what the president is reading. At least, they used to be until Donald Trump became president. After that it didn’t seem like there was much to care about because he didn’t read much of anything. He said the best book ever written was the book that he wrote, and I’m assuming that he had a ghostwriter.

  6. I would recommend the late Tony Judt’s Ill Fares the Land which treats of the immeasurable loss caused by the death/decline of social democracy worldwide as we lurch into a year where the chances of a fascist USA is a terrifying possibility.

    I must read the Anna Funder. Eileen O Shaugnassy’s invisibility is a kind of literary tragedy.

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