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Australian Book Review is delighted to announce that Rowan Heath is the winner of this yearâs ABR Elizabeth Jolley Short Story Prize for their story âThe Mannequinâ. They receive $6,000. This yearâs prize â worth a total of $12,500 â received 1,200 entries from thirty-eight different countries. Uzma Aslam Khan placed second and receives $4,000 for her story âOur Own Fantasticâ , and Winter Bel placed third and receives $2,500 for her story âBlack Waxâ
The 2023 Jolley Prize was judged by Gregory Day, Jennifer Mills, and Maria Takolander.
The shortlisted stories are published in the 2023 August issue (you can purchase single issues here). ABR extends a warm congratulations to Rowan Heath, Uzma Aslam Khan, and Winter Bel as well as to the longlisted entrants (listed below). Thank you to all who entered this yearâs prize.
The shortlisted stories are listed below (in alphabetical order by author surname)
âBlack Waxâ by Winter Bel (France/United Kingdom)
âThe Mannequinâ by Rowan Heath (Victoria)
âOur Own Fantasticâ by Uzma Aslam Khan (United States)
The longlist for the 2023 ABR Elizabeth Jolley Short Story Prize is as follows (in alphabetical order by author surname):
âand ever more strangerâ by Emily Armanios (Victoria)
âBlack Waxâ by Winter Bel (France/United Kingdom) - shortlisted
âBackstoryâ by Sue Brennan (Japan)
âThe Mannequinâ by Rowan Heath (Victoria) - shortlisted
âOur Own Fantasticâ by Uzma Aslam Khan (United States) - shortlisted
âOlder, Youngerâ by Kira McPherson (England)
âFatal attractionâ by Fope Ojo (Netherlands)
âHappy At Workâ by Ellen Rodger (NSW)
More information about the longlisted authors can be found below.
Emily Armanios is a twenty-three-year-old Greek-Egyptian poet currently writing and living on unceded Wurundjeri land, in beautiful Naarm. She spends her time being awestruck by the terror/tenderness of the exquisite world, in which you'll often find her writing âpoetry or elseâ.
Winter Bel is a writer of literary fiction and poetry. Born in England, she now splits time between Paris and Los Angeles. She is presently polishing for publication her dĂ©but novel After The Angels, as well as her short story collection Hard Place Rock, from which story âBlack Waxâ is taken. Her website is winterbel.info.
Sue Brennan is an Australian writer with stories published in Australia in ACE - Contemporary Stories by Emerging Writers, Meniscus, Meanjin, and in the USA in The Peauxdunque Review, Big City Lit and The Blue Mountain Review. In 2022, she was the winner of the New Feathers Anthology prose award. She can be found at www.suebrennan.net.
Rowan Heath is a writer, editor and LARPer living on Wurundjeri land. Their creative work has appeared in In Flux: Trans and Gender Diverse Reflections and Imaginings, Monstrous Appetites, Perspektif, Verge and Antithesis. Their fiction will be published in Strangely Enough, an ASSF anthology, in late 2023. They have edited for publications such as Farrago, Inkspot and CAMP. They currently work in the higher education sector.
Uzma Aslam Khan is the author of five internationally acclaimed novels. These include Trespassing, nominated for a 2003 Commonwealth Prize; The Geometry of God, a Kirkus Reviewsâ Best Book of 2009; Thinner Than Skin, nominated for the Man Asian Literary Prize and DSC Prize for South Asian Literature. Khanâs new novel, The Miraculous True History of Nomi Ali, was a New York Timesâ Best Historical Fiction 2022. It won the Karachi Literature Festival-Getz Pharma Fiction Prize, and has been longlisted for the Massachusetts Book Awards for 2023. Born in Pakistan and now residing in the United States, Khan has also lived in the Philippines, Japan, England, Morocco, and Oceania. Her website is https://www.uzmaaslamkhan.com
Kira McPherson is the author of Higher Education, published by Ultimo Press (2023). Her short stories have been published in Westerly, the Stockholm Review of Literature, and the London Short Story Prize Anthology, and she is an associate editor of Short Fiction Journal. She grew up in Perth, Western Australia and lives in London.
Fope Ojo is a writer from Lagos, Nigeria, who currently lives between Amsterdam and Lagos. She is an alumni of Purple Hibiscus Workshop in Awka, Anambra 2020, Sonic Acts critical writing workshop in Amsterdam, 2021 and the Iceland Writers Retreat, 2023. Some of her work has appeared in Overland, Necessary Fiction, Spread Magazine, Cherry Tree, Ynaija, Irin Journal, Sleek Magazine, Native to name a few. Two of her short stories have been nominated for the Best of Net category in Fiction, and the Pushcart Prize. Her short fiction was also longlisted for the 2020 Commonwealth short story prize.
Ellen Rodgerâs novella The Girlsâ Room was published in Love & Desire, Four Modern Australian Novellas. Her writing has also appeared in The Best Australian Stories and The Age. Her recent short fiction has been nominated for the Newcastle Short Story Award, the Albury City Short Story Award, and the Alan Marshall Short Story Award. Ellen has an MA (Creative Writing) from Western Sydney University.
Please sign up to our free 'Prizes and Programs' newsletter for more information about the 2023 ABR Elizabeth Jolley Short Story Prize.
ABR warmly acknowledges the generous support of ABR Patron Ian Dickson AM, who makes the Jolley Prize possible in this lucrative form.
Yves Rees is a Lecturer in History at La Trobe University and author of All About Yves: Notes from a transition (Allen & Unwin 2021). Their essay âReading the Mess Backwardsâ won the 2020 Calibre Essay Prize. A co-host of the history podcast Archive Fever, Yves is a regular contributor to ABC radio and The Conversation, and their work has appeared in ABR, Overland, Guardian Australia, Inside Story, and Archer.
Beejay Silcox is an Australian writer and critic, and was the ABR Fortieth Birthday Fellow. Her literary criticism and cultural commentary appear in national arts publications such as ABR and Times Literary Supplement. Her award-winning short stories have been published at home and abroad.
Peter Rose has been Editor of Australian Book Review since 2001. Previously he was a publisher at Oxford University Press. His reviews and essays have appeared mostly in ABR. He has published six books of poetry, two novels, and a family memoir, Rose Boys (Text Publishing), which won the 2003 National Biography Award.
Australian Book Review is delighted to announce that Tracy Ellis is the winner of this yearâs ABR Elizabeth Jolley Short Story Prize for her story âNatural Wonderâ. She receives $6,000. This yearâs prize â worth a total of $12,500 â received 1,338 entries from thirty-six different countries. Nina Cullen placed second and receives $4,000 for her story âDog Parkâ, and C.J. Garrow placed third and receives $2,500 for his story âWhale Fallâ.
The 2022 Jolley Prize was judged by Amy Baillieu, Melinda Harvey, and John Kinsella. The judgesâ report, as well as the full longlist, can be found below.
Each of the shortlisted stories are published in the 2022 August issue (purchase single issues here). ABR extends a warm congratulations to Tracy Ellis, Nina Cullen, and C.J. Garrow, as well as to the longlisted entrants. Thank you to all who entered this yearâs prize. We look forward to receiving your entries next year.
Tracy Ellis
for âNatural Wonderâ
Tracy Ellis lives in Sydney and works as an editor in digital and print media. She has a Masterâs in Creative Writing from UTS and was previously longlisted for ABRâs Calibre Essay Prize.
âNina Cullen
for âDog Parkâ
Nina Cullen is a Newcastle-based writer whose work has appeared in various Australian and international publications. She has just finished a collection of linked short stories and is working on a novel.
C.J. Garrow
for âWhale Fallâ
C.J. Garrow is a Melbourne writer whose fiction has been shortlisted for various international prizes. His story âEgg Timerâ was shortlisted in the 2020 Jolley Prize.
Full longlist
âby the hourâ by Diana Clarke (New Zealand)
âDog Parkâ by Nina Cullen (NSW) - shortlisted
âCase Notesâ by Sonja Dechian (Vic.)
âNatural Wonderâ by Tracy Ellis (NSW) - shortlisted
âWhale Fallâ by C.J. Garrow (Vic.) - shortlisted
âAnd Then There Is Pinkâ by Madison Griffiths (Vic.)
âGladsâ by Susan Hettinger (United States)
âhalf-moons filled with jamâ by Andy Kovacic (NSW)
âBorn for Youâ by Magdalena McGuire (Vic.)
âThe Mendâ by Bruce Meyer (Canada)
âBlowing Upâ by Alec PatriÄ (Vic.)
âNot-Johnâ by Jonathan Ricketson (Vic.)
âZamekâ by Alex Skovron (Vic.)
âhuman materialâ by Tracey Slaughter (New Zealand)
Judgesâ comments
In âNatural Wonderâ, the narrator watches over three boys â her son and his two cousins â as they spend the first days of a new year playing at a beach on Sydney harbour. This story of children swimming and fencing with toy lightsabers on the sand has a gently melancholic undertow: it emerges that the cousins have experienced the recent trauma of losing their mother. The narrator feels a strong urge to protect and comfort her nephews but she is also drawn to ideas of escape and freedom. The story is remarkable for its quietness, acknowledgement of knotty feelings, and the room it makes for small miracles.
In the tense and atmospheric story âDog Parkâ, Georgie takes her young son Max on a midday visit to the park where she watches from a shaded bench while he plays. Georgieâs protective love for her son infuses the story even as her desperate longing to shield him from potential pain or humiliation leads to growing tensions and an unsettling confrontation. âDog Parkâ is a tender examination of the evolving relationship between an anxious mother and her growing child that is filled with nuanced observations and telling details. The complex interactions between the characters in this story are particularly convincing.
The bullying of Bernard Tusk at a school for boys âof shallow prospectsâ is conveyed in a wry, uncanny, and almost defamiliarising way in âWhale Fallâ, which uses the beaching of a whale carcass as a metaphor for pointless death. As an implicated but also threatened observer, the narrator takes us through the destruction of Tusk who, like all the younger boys, vaguely seeks âcoolâ, but canât attain it. The triggering complicity of the narrator is both strangely self-exonerating and self-accusatory as he tries to figure out his role between collusion and empathy. The story skilfully examines a fraught complicity and guilt.
ABR warmly acknowledges the generous support of ABR Patron Ian Dickson, who makes the Jolley Prize possible in this lucrative form. We congratulate all the longlisted and shortlisted authors.
Previous winners
Subscribers to ABR can read previous prize-winning stories to the Jolley Prize. To read these stories, click here.
If you aren't a subscriber, digital subscriptions begin at only $10 per month. Click here to become an ABR subscriber.
Sarah Holland-Batt is the author of three volumes of poetry, most recently The Jaguar (UQP, 2022), and a book of essays, Fishing for Lightning: The spark of poetry (UQP, 2021). She has received a number of honours, including the Prime Ministerâs Literary Award for Poetry, a Sydney Myer Creative Fellowship, and the Judy Harris Writer in Residence Fellowship at the University of Sydneyâs Charles Perkins Centre. Sarah is Professor of Creative Writing at QUT and Chair of the ABR Board.
Des Cowley is Principal Librarian, History of the Book and Arts, at State Library Victoria. He is co-author of The World of the Book (MUP, 2007), and co-editor of Creating and Collecting: Artistsâ books in Australia (2015). He recently edited the Collected Prose Poems of Gary Catalano and is editor of the Red Letter series of poetry chapbooks, published by Life Before Man press.
James Jiang is Assistant Editor at ABR. He was awarded his PhD in English from the University of Cambridge and taught for a number of years at the University of Melbourne. He has written for a variety of publications in Australia and abroad on poetry, critical culture, diasporic literature, and sport.
The winner of the 2023 Calibre Essay Prize is Tracy Ellis for her essay 'Flow States' which appears in our May 2023 issue. The runner up is Bridget Vincent for her essay 'Child Adjacent' which will appear in a future issue.
For more information about Tracy Ellis, Bridget Vincent and the results of the 2023 Calibre Essay Prize click here.
The shortlist for the 2023 Calibre Essay Prize was announced on 11 April 2023.
Status: Winner, runner-up and shortlist announced
Prize money: $7,500
Dates: 14 October 2022 â 15 January 2023, 11:59 pm
Judges: Yves Rees, Peter Rose and Beejay Silcox
The winning essay will be published in the May issue of ABR.
Past winners
Click the link for more information about past winners and to read their essays.
FAQs and Terms and Conditions
Please read our Frequently Asked Questions before contacting us with queries about the Calibre Prize.
Before entering the Calibre Essay Prize, all entrants must read the Terms and Conditions.
Exclusivity
Entries may be offered elsewhere during the judging of the Calibre Prize. If an entrant is longlisted and has their essay offered elsewhere, the entrant will have 24 hours to decide if they would like to withdraw their essay on offer elsewhere or from the Calibre Prize. Exclusivity is essential for longlisted essays. The overall winning essay will be published in the April 2023 issue, followed by the runner-up.
Entry fees
Current ABR subscribers: $20
Standard/non subscribers: $30*
*All non-subscribers will automatically receive four-month digital access to ABR free of charge.
Entry + subscription bundles
Entry + 1-year digital subscription: $90
Entry + 1-year print subscription (Australia): $110
Entry + 1-year print subscription (NZ and Asia): $190
Entry + 1-year print subscription (Rest of World): $210
Those who purchase a subscription while entering will be able to submit subsequent entries at the subscriber rate ($20).
ABR warmly acknowledges the generous support of ABR Patrons Mary-Ruth Sindrey and Peter McLennan.
Dan Disney was named the overall winner of the 2023 Peter Porter Poetry Prize at an online ceremony on 19 January 2023 for his poem 'periferal, fantasmal'. The Porter Prize - Australia's most prestigious poetry competition - is worth a total of $10,000. This yearâs judges â Sarah Holland-Batt, Des Cowley and James Jiang â shortlisted five poems by Chris Andrews (NSW ), Chris Arnold (WA), Michelle Cahill (NSW ), Dan Disney (South Korea/Australia), and Raisa Tolchinsky (USA). The shortlisted poems were selected from 1,132 entries sent from thirty-four countries. They appear in the JanuaryâFebruary issue of ABR.
The judges said this of âperiferal, fantasmalâ:
âA tour de force of linguistic estrangements, âperiferal, fantasmalâ excavates the colonial history sedimented in the names that litter the landscape of the Gippsland region in Victoria. Through its comic neologisms and deft calibrations of lyric temporality, the poem replays the sanction for mineral extraction provided by exonymic nomination, reminding us of the scotch-soaked nightmare from which we are still trying to awake.â
On learning of his win, Dan Disney commented:
âPeter Porter opens his poem âLandscape with Orpheusâ with an epigraph from The Magic Flute â âYou only live once, let that be enough for you!â. Poems like Porterâs generate not only wonder but also awed awareness (and, for me, a shift thereafter towards ethical, experimental rhetoric). I am dazzled to be in the bright reality of a moment like this. It is an incredible honour to receive a prize bearing the name of such a prodigiously enlivening, humanising poet.â
Prefacing their comments on the shortlist (each appraisal appears below the shortlisted poets), the judges said:
The judges were pleased to consider a rich and deep field of entries to the Peter Porter Poetry Prize this year, reflecting both the variety and strength of contemporary poetry, and many of its stylistic and thematic concerns. This yearâs entries reflected a pronounced interest in climate issues and contemporary geopolitics, with a number of poems touching on recent floods and bushfires, species extinction, and the war in Ukraine. Many entries veered towards the experimental, and there were fewer lyric poems, love poems, and poems explicitly interested in established forms than in previous years. The outstanding poems on this yearâs shortlist share an interest in political concerns refracted through their expression in language, including philology and etymology, and the power of listing, cataloguing, and naming. The five shortlisted poems engage with pressing subjects such as mining, colonial place naming, abortion, environmental degradation, and the relationship between the human and non-human worlds, but do so with subtlety, wit, and linguistic charge, rather than didacticism. Curiously, a taxonomic impulse manifests in several of the shortlisted poems, which probe the inflections, origins, and currency of words.
The shortlisted poems appear in our JanuaryâFebruary 2023 issue and subscribers can read them here. The print edition is also available to purchase, simply click here and follow the prompts.
âLoss-invaded Catalogueâ by Chris Andrews (Australia)
Chris Andrews has taught at the Universities of Melbourne and Western Sydney. He is the author of two collections of poems: Cut Lunch (Indigo, 2002) and Lime Green Chair (Waywiser, 2012). His study of the Oulipo, How to Do Things with Forms, was published by McGill-Queenâs University Press in 2022. Currently he is translating You Glow in the Dark by the Bolivian writer Liliana Colanzi.
Judges: âLoss-Invaded Catalogueâ marshals the satirical potential of the tetrameter line into a deadpan critique of the intractability of the new systems â romantic, informational, or industrial â to which we are all made to subscribe. Lifting away the bureaucratic pallor that has become the most visible alibi for violence in our contemporary world, the poem deploys lyrical perception against the mortmain of clichĂ© and institutionalised groupthink.
âRunning Up That Billâ by Chris Arnold (Australia)
Chris Arnold lives in Perth, on Whadjuk Noongar country. Chris was shortlisted for the 2022 Peter Porter Poetry Prize, and heâs currently completing a PhD in Creative Writing at the University of Western Australia. He specialises in electronic literature.
Judges: Rife with argot and acerbic wit, âRunning Up that Billâ mashes up open-cut mining, news headlines, and pop culture to create a patchwork view of an Australia that venerates the wrong gods. Toggling between Kate Bush, Cold Chisel, the excesses of Surfers Paradise, and the destruction of the Juukan Gorge, the poet garners breakneck momentum over a virtuosic single sentence, offering a dark vision of a nation in thrall to our faded wrecks of âcultureâ âhalf-hallucinated, half-real â where âthe dog trackâs still going and the emuâs / on tapâ.
âField Notes for an Albatross Palimpsestâ by Michelle Cahill (Australia)
Michelle Cahill (she/they) is an Australian novelist and poet of Indian heritage who lives in Sydney. Daisy & Woolf is published by Hachette. Letter to Pessoa (Giramondo) was awarded the NSW Premier's Literary Award for New Writing. Their prizes include the Red Room Poetry Fellowship, the Val Vallis Award, the KWS Hilary Mantel International Short Story Prize, and a shortlisting in the ABR Elizabeth Jolley Prize. Their work appears in The Best of Australian Poems, HEAT, Plumwood Mountain, Kalliope X and The Kenyon Review.
Judges: Tapping into a rich tradition of seafaring idiom, âField Notes for an Albatross Palimpsestâ presents a collage of voices crossing centuries: mariners and poets, journalists and technocrats. Summoning Coleridgeâs metaphorical bird, and sure-footed in its naming, the poem plots a line between slavery, damaged food chains, over-harvesting of marine resources, clogged and polluted beaches, âcreaking landfillâ. Woven from the language of shipboard journals, MÄori place names, maps, newspaper reports, these patchwork notes posit extinction as an endgame, consumed at âhigh speedâ.
âperiferal, fantasmalâ by Dan Disney (South Korea/Australia) (winner)
Dan Disneyâs most recent collection of poems, accelerations & inertias, (Vagabond Press 2021), was shortlisted for the Judith Wright Calanthe Award and received the Kenneth Slessor Prize. Together with Matthew Hall, he is the editor of New Directions in Contemporary Australian Poetry (Palgrave 2021). He teaches with the English Department at Sogang University, in Seoul.
Judges: A tour de force of linguistic estrangements, âperiferal, fantasmalâ excavates the colonial history sedimented in the names that litter the landscape of the Gippsland region in Victoria. Through its comic neologisms and deft calibrations of lyric temporality, the poem replays the sanction for mineral extraction provided by exonymic nomination, reminding us of the scotch-soaked nightmare from which we are still trying to awake.
âAbiquiu, New Mexicoâ by Raisa Tolchinsky (United States)
Raisa Tolchinsky writes about love, grief, and the wisdom of the body. She is the recipient of the Henfield Prize for Fiction and two Pushcart Prize nominees in poetry. Raisa earned her MFA in poetry from the University of Virginia and her BA from Bowdoin College. She is trained as an amateur boxer. Her chapbook Number One Deadliest, an eco-poetic meditation on boxing and climate grief, was published with the Under Review in 2021. She was shortlisted in the 2021 Peter Porter Poetry Prize. Currently, Raisa is the George Bennett Writer-in-Residence at Phillips Exeter Academy in New Hampshire.
Judges: âAbiquiu, New Mexicoâ, compelling in its brevity, strikes the reader like a blow to the solar plexus. Shifting gears between clinical terminology and wide-open desert landscapes, it careens between rage and beauty, loss and renewal. Rendered in the irreducible language of the heart, free of clichĂ© and sentimentality, the poemâs unembellished phrasing â âmother tongue emptied into ordinary languageâ â confronts the limits of speech, asking how it is possible to express âimpossible griefâ.
Chris Andrews (NSW), âLoss-Invaded Catalogueâ â Shortlisted
Steve Armstrong (NSW), âWhen night is the mother of wisdomâ â Longlisted
Chris Arnold (WA), âRunning Up That Billââ Shortlisted
Luke Beesley (VIC), âTilde and authorâ â Longlisted
Michelle Cahill (NSW), âField Notes for an Albatross Palimpsestâ â Shortlisted
Eva Da (US), âForeign Skiesâ â Longlisted
Dan Disney (Korea), âperiferal, fantasmalâ â Shortlisted
Dave Drayton (NSW), âThe gold is goneâ â Longlisted
Katie Hale (England), âTitaniaâ â Longlisted
Dimitra Harvey (NSW), âFeralâ â Longlisted
Rhian Healy (VIC), âFull Throttleâ â Longlisted
Julie Janson (NSW), âKurraarr Far Countryâ â Longlisted
Rosa Lane (US), âFoxglove [disambiguation]â â Longlisted
Penelope Layland (VIC), âThe paddy melon warsâ â Longlisted
James Lucas (NSW), âTrip advisorâ â Longlisted
Kirsten McAteer (US), âCowsâ â Longlisted
Isabella Mead (VIC), âBonnetheadâ â Longlisted
Damen OâBrien (QLD), âThe pelican feederâ â Longlisted
Mark OâFlynn (NSW), âFor Sale, The Most Beautiful Object in the Worldâ â Longlisted
Karen Petersen (US), âMy Long Islandâ â Longlisted
Peter Ramm (NSW), âOn Seeing the Statue of Darius from Susaâ â Longlisted
Amritha Selvarajaguru (US), âmilkteeth & the love of the sharkâ â Longlisted
Meredith Stricker (US), âAutopoiesisâ â Longlisted
Raisa Tolchinsky (US), âAbiquiu, New Mexicoâ â Shortlisted
Gabriela Valencia (US), âDeath, Whistleâ â Longlisted
To stay updated on the Porter Prize and Australian Book Reviewâs other prizes, please sign up for our âPrizes and Programsâ newsletter.
We gratefully acknowledge the long-standing support of Morag Fraser AM and Andrew Taylor AM and support in memory of Kate Boyce.
Distinguished classical musician Simon Tedeschi has won the sixteenth Calibre Essay Prize, worth a total of $7,500.
Tedeschi receives $5,000 for his essay âThis Woman My Grandmotherâ, while the runner-up, Sarah Gory receives $2,500 for her submission, âGhosts, Ghosts Everywhereâ. The winning essay was published in the May 2022 issue of ABR. The runner-up essay appeared in the September 2022 issue.
The judges â Declan Fry, Beejay Silcox and Peter Rose, Editor of ABR â selected a shortlist of twelve essays from a field of 569 entries from seventeen different countries. The ten other essays making up the shortlist are listed below.
Congratulations to Simon Tedeschi and all the writers shortlisted in the 2022 Calibre Essay Prize!
In âThis Woman My Grandmotherâ, Tedeschi explores his grandmotherâs story:
âMy grandmother, a Polish Jew, the only survivor of a family obliterated by the Nazis, wrote a memoir of her wartime years shortly before she died sixteen years ago. Only recently was I able to bring myself to read it. When I did, it caused not only a torrent of memory to erupt but spurred me to find out more about this tormented woman who, despite her vociferousness and overbearing presence, was the bearer of secrets too painful to divulge.â
The judges commented on Simon Tedeschiâs essay:
This yearâs winning essay has a powerful, memorable duality: itâs at once forceful and gentle, timeless and timely. While Tedeschi plays with eternal themes â the fragility of memory and intergenerational anguish â there is also a quiet urgency to his account of his grandmother, Lucyâs, complicated legacy. We stand on the cusp of a great forgetting: the Holocaust is fading from living memory, and Covid is ravaging our elderly. As we lose our story-keepers and war rages in Europe, it feels vital not just to honour the past, but to acknowledge its knots and nuances. That is what Tedeschi has done in this remarkable essay, with grace, care, and glorious prose craft.
2022 Calibre Essay Prize Shortlist:
Linda Atkins (NSW): âShouting Abortionâ
Jessie Berry-Porter (Vic): âMilos As a Symbolâ
Chrysanthi Diasinos (NSW): âÎÎč ÏαÏÏαÏÎżÎŒÎŹÎœÎ”Ï ÎșαÎč ÏÎż ÏÏÏ
ÏÏÏαΌΌαΜâ
Michael Garbutt (NSW): âThe Museum of Mankindâ
Savannah Hollis (Vic): âThe Diary of a Bottom Bitchâ
Heather Taylor Johnson (SA): âThe Giving and Taking Away of Voiceâ
Michaela Keeble (NZ): âThe Bind: On Readingâ
Emma Shortis (Vic): âAmerican Gunsâ
Kirsten Tranter (USA): âThe Time of Writingâ
Miriam Webster (Vic): âThe Trouble with Endingsâ
Amy Baillieu is Deputy Editor of Australian Book Review. She completed a Masters of Publishing and Communications at the University of Melbourne in 2011 and holds a Bachelor of Arts from the same university. Prior to becoming Deputy Editor of ABR in 2012, she worked in other editorial roles at the magazine and was Philanthropy Manager from 2011â12. She regularly reviews fiction for ABR and also works as a freelance editor.
Melinda Harvey is a book critic who has written for a wide variety of publications, including ABR, since 2004. She is on the judging panel of the Miles Franklin Literary Award (2017-present) and works on the Stella Count. She currently holds a JUNCTURE Fellowship for Mid-Career and Established Critics at the Sydney Review of Books and is Lecturer in English at Monash University.
John Kinsella is the author of over forty books. His most recent publications include the short story collection Pushing Back (Transit Lounge, 2021) and the poetry collection Supervivid Depastoralism (Vagabond, 2021). The first volume of his Collected Poems, The Ascension of Sheep, is due out shortly with UWAP (2022). He is a Fellow of Churchill College, Cambridge University, and Emeritus Professor at Curtin University. With Tracy Ryan he is the co-editor of The Fremantle Press Anthology of The Western Australian Poetry (2017). He lives with his family in the Western Australian wheatbelt.
Anthony Lawrence is the winner of the 2022 Peter Porter Poetry Prize worth a total of $10,000. This was announced at an online ceremony on January 19.
Anthony receives $6,000 for his winning poem, 'In the Shadows of Our Heads', while the four other shortlisted poets â Chris Arnold, Dan Disney, Michael Farrell, and Debbie Lim â each receive $1,000. The full shortlist, including the winning poem, is available to read online and is published in the JanuaryâFebruary issue of ABR.
This yearâs judges â Sarah Holland-Batt, Jaya Savige, and Anders Villani â shortlisted five poems from 1,328 entries, from 34 countries.
Congratulations to Anthony Lawrence and to all the poets shortlisted and longlisted in the 2022 Peter Porter Poetry Prize!
In their report the judges noted:
Brimming with surprise, supple, pitch-perfect imagery, linguistic energy and wit, âIn the Shadows of Our Headsâ is a stunningly vibrant poem by a masterful technician at the top of his game. This unusual love poem revels in the unpredictability of those connections, intellectual and physical, forged between simpatico minds and damaged bodies across space and time. A vivid, potent reminder of loveâs dance of proximity and distance â at a time when these fundamental bases of human intimacy have been thrown into fraught relief â it is a work deftly attuned to our present moment.
Iâd called the Humane Society to report the neglect
of a neighbourâs dogs. A woman assured me there
would be an investigation, took my details, then asked
if I needed more assistance. I mentioned the flightless
swans of Malta, and she said Imagine, ten thousand years,
then added They were the size of the pygmy elephants
that also roamed the island. To test her liability
to respond in a capering manner, I described the pattern
of my sleep and how, after drinking Akvavit, my cells
become part of the dust of the Horse Head Nebula.
Your astral projection is world class, she said. I could
see a swivel chair, the noise-cancelling headset, a light
blue blouse embroidered with a hook or claw symbol,
the windows of light on her shoes. Are your projections
always so peregrinatory? Iâm curious, as I sense Iâm far
too fond of the regional. Satisfied, I felt compelled to ask
if Spring, in the mountains, had ever crossed her radar
as a good season and reason for marriage, but chose
instead to invite her for a drink. I donât date, but we
could drive, as long as youâre partial to Elgarâs
âNimrodâ, anything by Wagner, and my minder, Karl,
who, depending on his mood, likes to follow at a clip
or respectful distance in his Beamer. I laughed. Alright,
she said, His name is Bob, heâs either a serial tail-gater,
or he moves like a tortoise in his Triumph Mayflower.
On Sunday morning, her music darkening the speakers,
we passed the wreckage of housing estates, then onto
a road lined with trees that cast flickering lines
of light and shade like a view through the arrow-slit
of a zoetrope. We opened the past and found things
worth sharing. As a child sheâd been orphaned when,
escaping a forest fire, the family car had come adrift
in smoke and driven off a bridge. She had lost an eye
and her spine had been broken. The monocular vision
and limp had ended her ribbon-floor exercise routine.
When we met, she had approached like someone
leaning into wind. I told her Iâd stolen meteor samples
from an observatory on a school excursion. This had led
to frequent stealing, and when I said kleptomania,
I lowered my voice and concluded the confession
with the words illness, serial, and the eight-point-turn
of psychopharmacological. When we stopped for lunch,
I sat across from her by a river whose patchwork surface
she described as snake skins sewn haphazardly together.
I saw the glass eye, and she said Ocular. Three perfect
syllables, then they ruined everything with Prosthesis.
Her hand hovered briefly over mine before moving on.
I said nothing and she took a long time to answer it.
We discussed rescue dogs and how certain bats would
make good pets if only their bites werenât potentially
lethal, causing fever and delirium. At fifteen, she had
run away to live in a trilogy of Mervyn Peake novels.
I suggested we return via a pub where the Guinness
is collared velvet, the music live. As we stood, the flame
of a kingfisher fluttered on like a pilot light and went out
in the shadows of our heads.
_____________
Anthony Lawrence has published sixteen books of poems, the most recent being Ken (Life Before Man, 2020). His books and individual poems have won a number of awards, including the Peter Porter Poetry Prize, the Prime Ministerâs Literary Award for Poetry, the Philip Hodgins Memorial Medal, and the Blake Poetry Prize. A new book of poems, Ordinary Time, a collaboration with the poet Audrey Molloy, is to be published in 2022. He teaches Creative Writing at Griffith University, Queensland, and lives on Moreton Bay.
The Peter Porter Poetry Prize is one of Australiaâs most prestigious poetry awards.
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We gratefully acknowledge the long-standing support of Morag Fraser AM and Andrew Taylor AM.
ABR is delighted to announce the shortlist for the 2022 ABR Elizabeth Jolley Short Story Prize. The shortlisted stories, which appear in our August issue, are (in alphabetical order):
âDog Parkâ by Nina Cullen
âNatural Wonderâ by Tracy Ellis
âWhale Fallâ by C.J. Garrow
The overall winner, who will receive $6,000 from the total prize money of $12,500, will be announced at a special online ceremony at 6pm on 11 August. This is a free event and all are welcome but please contact us to register your interest at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. so that we can send you the Zoom link on the morning of the event.
The 2022 Jolley Prize was judged by Amy Baillieu, Melinda Harvey, and John Kinsella. The judgesâ report, as well as the full longlist, can be found below.
Nina Cullen is a Newcastle-based writer whose work has appeared in various Australian and international publications. She has just finished a collection of linked short stories and is working on a novel.
Tracy Ellis lives in Sydney and works as an editor in digital and print media. She has a Masterâs in Creative Writing from UTS and was previously longlisted for ABRâs Calibre Essay Prize.
C.J. Garrow is a Melbourne writer whose fiction has been shortlisted for various international prizes. His story âEgg Timerâ was shortlisted in the 2020 Jolley Prize.
âby the hourâ by Diana Clarke (New Zealand)
âDog Parkâ by Nina Cullen (NSW) - shortlisted
âCase Notesâ by Sonja Dechian (Vic.)
âNatural Wonderâ by Tracy Ellis (NSW) - shortlisted
âWhale Fallâ by C.J. Garrow (Vic.) - shortlisted
âAnd Then There Is Pinkâ by Madison Griffiths (Vic.)
âGladsâ by Susan Hettinger (United States)
âhalf-moons filled with jamâ by Andy Kovacic (NSW)
âBorn for Youâ by Magdalena McGuire (Vic.)
âThe Mendâ by Bruce Meyer (Canada)
âBlowing Upâ by Alec PatriÄ (Vic.)
âNot-Johnâ by Jonathan Ricketson (Vic.)
âZamekâ by Alex Skovron (Vic.)
âhuman materialâ by Tracey Slaughter (New Zealand)
This year we received 1338 stories from thirty-six different countries, a testament to ongoing international interest in the Jolley Prize and the magazine. Writers explored themes and topics including the pandemic, climate change, grief, desire, parenthood, and community across a range of genres. Here are the judgesâ comments on the three shortlisted stories (presented here, as in the issue, in alphabetical order):
In the tense and atmospheric story âDog Parkâ, Georgie takes her young son Max on a midday visit to the park where she watches from a shaded bench while he plays. Georgieâs protective love for her son infuses the story even as her desperate longing to shield him from potential pain or humiliation leads to growing tensions and an unsettling confrontation. âDog Parkâ is a tender examination of the evolving relationship between an anxious mother and her growing child that is filled with nuanced observations and telling details. The complex interactions between the characters in this story are particularly convincing.
In âNatural Wonderâ, the narrator watches over three boys â her son and his two cousins â as they spend the first days of a new year playing at a beach on Sydney harbour. This story of children swimming and fencing with toy lightsabers on the sand has a gently melancholic undertow: it emerges that the cousins have experienced the recent trauma of losing their mother. The narrator feels a strong urge to protect and comfort her nephews but she is also drawn to ideas of escape and freedom. The story is remarkable for its quietness, acknowledgement of knotty feelings, and the room it makes for small miracles.
The bullying of Bernard Tusk at a school for boys âof shallow prospectsâ is conveyed in a wry, uncanny, and almost defamiliarising way in âWhale Fallâ, which uses the beaching of a whale carcass as a metaphor for pointless death. As an implicated but also threatened observer, the narrator takes us through the destruction of Tusk who, like all the younger boys, vaguely seeks âcoolâ, but canât attain it. The triggering complicity of the narrator is both strangely self-exonerating and self-accusatory as he tries to figure out his role between collusion and empathy. The story skilfully examines a fraught complicity and guilt.
ABR warmly acknowledges the generous support of ABR Patron Ian Dickson AM, who makes the Jolley Prize possible in this lucrative form. We congratulate all the longlisted and shortlisted authors.