Premier's Prize for Book of the Year Award (2023-)
Subcategory of Western Australian Premier's Book Awards
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Latest Winners / Recipients

Year: 2024

Indexed selectively. Also shortlisted: The Memory of Trees (Viki Cramer), Operation Hurricane (Paul Grace), and What's For Dinner? (Jill Griffiths).
winner y separately published work icon A Better Place Stephen Daisley , Melbourne : Text Publishing , 2023 26031842 2023 single work novel war literature

'In a novel of stark and lyrical beauty, award-winning author Stephen Daisley portrays the brutal effects of war on two New Zealand brothers.

'The old people in the district would often say that Roy was not quite the same after he come back. There was a brother. A twin brother, Tony. Tony Mitchell, different boy but a good rugby player. Bit of a mental case, they said, but Roy would have none of it. He always stayed close to Tony when they were growing up. They both went off to fight, must have been 1940. Only the one come back, though.

'Crete, they thought. We lost Tony over there.' (Publication summary)

Year: 2023

winner y separately published work icon The Red Witch : A Biography of Katharine Susannah Prichard Nathan Hobby , Carlton : Miegunyah Press , 2022 23816181 2022 single work biography

'Novelist, journalist and activist Katharine Susannah Prichard won fame for vivid novels that broke new ground depicting distinctly Australian ways of life and work — from Gippsland pioneers and West Australian prospectors to Pilbara station hands and outback opal miners. Her prize-winning debut The Pioneers made her a celebrity but she turned away from jaunty romances to write a trio of inter-war classics, Working Bullocks, Coonardoo and Haxby’s Circus. Heralded in her time as the ‘hope of the Australian novel’, her good friend Miles Franklin called Prichard ‘Australia’s most distinguished tragedian’.

'This biography of a literary giant traces Prichard’s journey from the genteel poverty of her Melbourne childhood to her impulsive marriage to Victoria Cross winner Hugo Throssell, and finally on to her long widowhood as a 'red witch', marked out from society by her loyalty to the Soviet Union and her unconventional ways.

'Through meticulous archival research and historical detective work, Nathan Hobby reveals many unknown aspects of Prichard’s life, including the likely identity of the mysterious lover who influenced her deeply in her twenties, her withdrawal from politics during her remarkable five-year literary peak and an intimate friendship with poet Hugh McCrae. Lively and detailed, The Red Witch is a gripping narrative alert to the drama and tragedy of Prichard’s remarkable life.'' (Publication summary)

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