Miles Franklin Award

      The Miles Franklin Literary Award is an annual literary prize awarded to "a novel which is of the highest literary merit and presents Australian life in any of its phases".[1] The award was set up according to the will of Miles Franklin (1879–1954), who is best known for writing the Australian classic My Brilliant Career (published in 1901) and for bequeathing her estate to fund this award.[2] As of 2013, the award is valued A$60,000.[3]


      Winners

      Year Author Title Publisher
      2013 Michelle de Kretser Questions of Travel Allen & Unwin
      2012 Anna Funder All That I Am Hamish Hamilton
      2011 Kim Scott That Deadman Dance Picador
      2010 Peter Temple Truth Text Publishing
      2009 Tim Winton Breath Hamish Hamilton
      2008 Steven Carroll The Time We Have Taken HarperCollins Publishers
      2007 Alexis Wright Carpentaria Giramondo
      2006 Roger McDonald The Ballad of Desmond Kale Vintage
      2005 Andrew McGahan The White Earth Allen & Unwin
      2004 Shirley Hazzard The Great Fire Farrar Straus and Giroux
      2003 Alex Miller Journey to the Stone Country Allen & Unwin
      2002 Tim Winton Dirt Music Picador
      2001 Frank Moorhouse Dark Palace Knopf
      2000 Thea Astley
      Kim Scott
      Drylands
      Benang
      Penguin Books
      Fremantle Press
      1999 Murray Bail Eucalyptus Random House
      1998 Peter Carey Jack Maggs University of Queensland Press
      1997 David Foster The Glade within the Grove Vintage
      1996 Christopher Koch Highways to a War Heinemann
      1995 Helen Demidenko The Hand That Signed the Paper Allen & Unwin
      1994 Rodney Hall The Grisly Wife Macmillan
      1993 Alex Miller The Ancestor Game Penguin Books
      1992 Tim Winton Cloudstreet Penguin Books
      1991 David Malouf The Great World Chatto & Windus
      1990 Tom Flood Oceana Fine Allen & Unwin
      1989 Peter Carey Oscar and Lucinda University of Queensland Press
      1988 No award Date changed from year of publication to year of announcement.
      1987 Glenda Adams Dancing on Coral Viking Press
      1986 Elizabeth Jolley The Well Viking Press
      1985 Christopher Koch The Doubleman Chatto & Windus
      1984 Tim Winton Shallows Allen & Unwin
      1983 No award
      1982 Rodney Hall Just Relations Penguin Books
      1981 Peter Carey Bliss Faber and Faber
      1980 Jessica Anderson The Impersonators Macmillan
      1979 David Ireland A Woman of the Future Penguin Books
      1978 Jessica Anderson Tirra Lirra By the River Macmillan
      1977 Ruth Park Swords and Crowns and Rings Nelson Books
      1976 David Ireland The Glass Canoe Macmillan
      1975 Xavier Herbert Poor Fellow My Country Fontana Books
      1974 Ronald McKie The Mango Tree Collins
      1973 No award
      1972 Thea Astley The Acolyte Angus and Robertson
      1971 David Ireland The Unknown Industrial Prisoner Angus and Robertson
      1970 Dal Stivens A Horse of Air Angus and Robertson
      1969 George Johnston Clean Straw for Nothing Collins
      1968 Thomas Keneally Three Cheers for the Paraclete Angus and Robertson
      1967 Thomas Keneally Bring Larks and Heroes Cassell
      1966 Peter Mathers Trap Cassell
      1965 Thea Astley The Slow Natives Angus and Robertson
      1964 George Johnston My Brother Jack Collins
      1963 Sumner Locke Elliott Careful, He Might Hear You Harper and Row
      1962 Thea Astley
      George Turner
      The Well Dressed Explorer
      The Cupboard Under the Stairs
      Angus & Robertson
      Cassell
      1961 Patrick White Riders in the Chariot Eyre & Spottiswoode
      1960 Elizabeth O'Conner The Irishman Angus and Robertson
      1959 Vance Palmer The Big Fellow Angus and Robertson
      1958 Randolph Stow To the Islands Penguin Books
      1957 Patrick White Voss Eyre & Spottiswoode
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      Shortlisted Works

      Shortlisted titles are only shown for the years 1987 onwards. No record has yet been found for any shortlists being released prior to that year. Winners are listed in bold type.

      2013[4]

      2012[5]

      2011[6]

      2010[7]

      2009[8][9]

      2008[10]

      2007[11]

      2006[12]

      2005[13]

      2004[14]

      2003

      2002

      2001

      Note: Matthew Kneale's novel is the first by a non-Australian to be shortlisted for the award. Hannie Rayson's, Life after George, is the first play to be shortlisted.

      2000

      Note: Dorothy Porter's What a Piece of Work is the first verse novel to be shortlisted.

      1999

      1998

      1997

      1996

      1995

      1994

      1993

      1992

      1991

      1990

      1989

      1988 Note: Date changed from year of publication to year of announcement, so no award was made in this year.

      1987

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      Longlisted works

      Longlisted titles are only shown for the years 2005 onwards. That was the first year that such a list was released by the judging panel. The number of works included on the longlist varies from year to year.

      2013

      2012

      2011

      2010

      2009

      2008

      2007

      2006

      2005

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      Further reading

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      External links

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      Last modified on 19 June 2013, at 06:14