The Richell Prize for Emerging Writers (2015-)
Subcategory of Awards Australian Awards
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History

The Richelle Prize for Emerging Writers is a $10,000 award in memory of publisher Matthew Richell. It is supported by The Guardian Australia and was jointly launched by the Richell family and Hachette Australia, where Matt was chief executive, at the opening night of the 2015 Emerging Writers’ festival, which is also a partner in the award.

Latest Winners / Recipients

Year: 2023

winner Alex Sawyer for 'Rat Daniels'.

Year: 2022

winner y separately published work icon The Deed Susannah Begbie , Sydney : Hachette Australia , 2024 27465401 2024 single work novel

'Now that's the way to bury your old man ... he sank into his Jason recliner, wincing. A burial: a body wrapped in handwoven cloth, women dancing and wailing. Too much, in Tom's opinion, but at least they were mourning. To hell with that, at least they showed up.'

'Tom Edwards is dying, and cranky. He's made his peace with the dying part. But he'd bet his property - the whole ten thousand acres of it - that there'd be no wailing at his funeral. His kids wouldn't be able to chop down a tree, let alone build a coffin to bury him in.

'Then Tom has an idea ...

'Christine is furious, David ashen-faced, and Sophie distracted. Only Jenny listens carefully as Vince Barton, of Barton & Sons, reads their father's will. Either they build his coffin - in four days - or they lose their inheritance. All of it.

'A perceptive and unforgettable debut novel, The Deed explores the messy, sometimes volatile, complications that only the best and worst of family can bring. Sometimes greed can be good.' (Publication summary)

as 'When Trees Fall Without Warning'.

Year: 2021

winner Simone Jordan for 'Tell Her She's Dreamin'.'

Year: 2020

winner y separately published work icon After the Rain Aisling Smith , Sydney : Hachette Australia , 2023 25767419 2023 single work novel

'Malti Fortune is uneasy. She has turned away from her birthplace of Fiji to make a new life in Melbourne. But all that she thought was certain is now in danger of being swept away. Her husband, Benjamin, a linguist, is a conundrum. He has changed. Or has she? The stories and superstitions of her childhood are telling her something she knows but doesn't want to hear - about being a trespasser, about not belonging.

'In the years to come, Malti and Benjamin's daughters are also to learn some hard truths. For Ellery, the hands-on father of her memories vanishes for months on end and the remembered fragments of good times aren't enough to sustain her anymore. Verona, on the verge of adulthood, can't imagine a world without her beloved Dad. He is her rock and hero. But Malti and Ellery both know that you can't depend on Benjamin.

'What makes a family? What does home look like? All three women are seeking answers. Each is haunted by her own ghosts. And by Benjamin. To find what they are looking for, they need to be honest with themselves and make peace with their own unreliable memories.' (Publication summary)

as 'Petrichor'.

Year: 2019

winner Else Fitzgerald for 'Nearly Curtains'.

Works About this Award

Come Writers and Critics Caroline Overington , 2022 single work column
— Appears in: The Weekend Australian , 5 November 2022; (p. 15)
Could ‘George Manolis’ Be the First Ever Greek Australian Detective? Con Stamocostas , 2018 single work column
— Appears in: Neos Kosmos , September 2018;

'Writer Peter Papathanasiou has made the longlist for the 2018 Richell Prize for emerging writers, which could see the publication of his debut novel featuring a Greek Australian detective.'  (Introduction)

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