Recently, I posted on the shortlist for the Barbara Jefferis Award, which has a very specific goal concerning the depiction of women and girls in a positive way or in a way that empowers the status of women and girls in society. Today, I’m sharing another shortlist for another award with a specific focus. The award is the Mark and Evette Moran Nib Literary Award and its focus is “Australian research-based literature”. It is offered through a municipal council, the Waverley Council in Sydney, which also makes it unusual.
Like the Barbara Jefferis award, and indeed the Stella Prize, this award is not limited by genre or form – that is both fiction and non-fiction are eligible. The judging is based on “on literary merit, research, readability, and value to the community”. I have written about it before, so if you are interested in its origins and intentions please check that link. Previous winners include historians Alison Bashford and Claire Wright, biologist Tim Low, novelists Helen Garner and Delia Falconer, and journalist Gideon Haigh.
Last year, the winner’s prize doubled in value from $20,000 to $40,000, due “to an ongoing multiyear commitment by the award’s principal sponsors, Sydney philanthropists, Mark and Evette Moran, Co-Founders/Co-CEOs of the Mark Moran Group”. This makes it a significant prize. There is also a People’s Choice Prize of $4,000 and the six shortlisted books receive $1,500 each.
The judges for the 2024 award are poet Jamie Grant, publisher Julia Carlomagno, and writer Angela Meyer (whom I’ve reviewed a few times here). They narrowed the shortlist to 6 books, from 175 submissions. The announcement quotes them as saying:
“We were impressed with the breadth and calibre of this year’s entries, which ranged across genres, forms and styles. The six chosen books cast a lens both global and intimate, exploring issues of gender, class, nation and family, and emphasising the importance of community. We congratulate all the shortlisted authors.”
The 2024 shortlist
- Shauna Bostock, Reaching through time: Finding my family’s stories (Allen & Unwin, First Nations family history)
- Deborah Conway, Book of life (Allen & Unwin, memoir, kimbofo’s review)
- Ryan Cropp, Donald Horne: A life in the lucky country (La Trobe University Press, biography, Lisa’s review)
- Anna Funder, Wifedom (Hamish Hamiliton, biography, my review)
- Melissa Lucashenko, Edenglassie (UQP, historical fiction, my review)
- Dave Witty, What the trees see: A wander through millennia of natural history in Australia (Monash University Press, ecoliterature/nature writing)
As commonly happens with this award, life-writing features heavily in the shortlist. Like last year, there is just one work of fiction. But, unlike some years, I’m pleased to have read two of the shortlist!
If you wish to vote for the Nib People’s Choice Awards, you can do so from now until 17th October, so click here to register your choice. For more information on the award overall, check out Waverley Council’s announcement.
The winner of the overall prize and the People’s Choice Award will be announced on 27 November.
Have you read any of these books?
Thanks for the link back to mine. Looks like an intriguing shortlist. I’ve also read Wifedom (but not reviewed it) and have Edenglassie on my TBR.
A pleasure Kimbofo … was thrilled to see you had reviewed it. I like this award because of its research focus, though I don’t always share it.
I’ve read two of the authors (and seen one sing, a number of times) but read none of the books. I’ve felt pressure to read Edenglassie and Wifedom this year but am yet to succumb, in fact I am more tempted by the first and the last, Bostock and Witty.
Thanks Bill. Of those I haven’t read the Boston and Witty interest me most. I do think Edenglassie is a good read … I think about it a lot … but you may not like it of course given your prejudices!!
That’s interesting that they include a prize for research that includes fiction. To be fair, a lot of fictional settings necessitate research.
It is Melanie but as you say a lot of fiction, and not just historical fiction too, needs research.