People's Choice Award (2009-)
Subcategory of New South Wales Premier's Literary Awards
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Notes

  • The People's Choice Award was inaugurated in 2009. Judges from the New South Premier's Literary Awards select the titles they consider 'the best in new Australian fiction' and New South Wales residents are then invited to vote on their favourite.

Latest Winners / Recipients

Year: 2024

winner y separately published work icon The God of No Good Sita Walker , Ultimo : Ultimo Press , 2023 25099092 2023 single work autobiography

'Sita Walker was raised by five strong matriarchs who taught her to believe in God and to be good. Her grandmother, mother and three aunts believed in unshakeable faith, in the power of prayer, in sacrifice, in magic, in the healing of turmeric and tea, and the wisdom of dreams. 

'But as hard as she tries to be good, Sita always suspects that deep down, she isn’t very good at all.

'At 35, she hasn’t prayed in years, her dream of true love has died, and along with it, her faith – not that she’s telling her mother, or her aunts. Instead, she abandons religion in secret, ‘taking tiny pieces of God away, one by one, under cover of darkness.’

'Now, the only way she can fulfill her destiny is to seek out the wisdom of the ones who came before, and truly understand the women who raised her. But will they understand her? Either way, the matriarchy will never be the same again.

'Traversing decades and continents – from Iran to India, Sri Lanka to the Czech Republic, Adelaide to the Torres Strait – The God of No Good is a beautifully lyrical and funny intergenerational memoir about six women and how their lives intertwine.' (Publication summary)

Year: 2023

winner y separately published work icon Every Version of You Grace Chan , Mulgrave : Affirm Press , 2022 24411791 2022 single work novel science fiction

'In late twenty-first century Australia, Tao-Yi and her partner Navin spend most of their time inside a hyper-immersive, hyper-consumerist virtual reality called Gaia. They log on, go to work, socialise, and even eat in this digital utopia.

'Meanwhile their aging bodies lie suspended in pods inside cramped apartments. Across the city, in the abandoned 'real' world, Tao-Yi's mother remains stubbornly offline, dwindling away between hospital visits and memories of her earlier life in Malaysia.

'When a new technology is developed to permanently upload a human brain to Gaia, Tao-Yi must decide what is most important: a digital future, or an authentic past.

'Never Let Me Go meets Black Mirror, with a dash of Murakami surrealism thrown in, this is speculative literary fiction at its best.' (Publication summary)

Year: 2022

winner y separately published work icon The Shut Ins Katherine Brabon , Crows Nest : Allen and Unwin , 2021 21508254 2021 single work novel

'Mai and Hikaru went to school together in the city of Nagoya, until Hikaru disappeared when they were eighteen. It is not until ten years later, when Mai runs into Hikaru's mother, Hiromi Sato, that Mai learns he became a hikikomori, a recluse unable to leave his bedroom for years. In secret, Hiromi Sato hires Mai as a 'rental sister', to write letters to Hikaru and encourage him to leave his room.

'Mai has recently married J, a devoted salaryman with conservative ideas about the kind of wife Mai will be. The renewed contact with her old school friend, Hikaru, stirs Mai's feelings of invisibility within her marriage. She is frustrated with her life and knows she will never fulfill J's obsession with the perfect wife and mother. What else is there for Mai to do but to disappear herself?' (Publication summary)

Year: 2021

winner y separately published work icon The Dictionary of Lost Words Pip Williams , South Melbourne : Affirm Press , 2020 18575183 2020 single work novel historical fiction

'Esme is born into a world of words. Motherless and irrepressibly curious, she spends her childhood in the ‘Scriptorium’, a garden shed in Oxford where her father and a team of dedicated lexicographers are collecting words for the very first Oxford English Dictionary. Esme’s place is beneath the sorting table, unseen and unheard. One day a slip of paper containing the word ‘bondmaid’ flutters to the floor. Esme rescues the slip and stashes it in an old wooden case that belongs to her friend, Lizzie, a young servant in the big house. Esme begins to collect other words from the Scriptorium that are misplaced, discarded or have been neglected by the dictionary men. They help her make sense of the world.

'Over time, Esme realises that some words are considered more important than others, and that words and meanings relating to women’s experiences often go unrecorded. While she dedicates her life to the Oxford English Dictionary, secretly, she begins to collect words for another dictionary: The Dictionary of Lost Words.' (Publication summary) 

Year: 2020

winner y separately published work icon The Yield Tara June Winch , Melbourne : Hamish Hamilton , 2019 15449866 2019 single work novel

'After a decade in Europe August Gondiwindi returns to Australia for the funeral of her much-loved grandfather, Albert, at Prosperous House, her only real home and also a place of great grief and devastation.

'Leading up to his death Poppy Gondiwindi has been compiling a dictionary of the language he was forbidden from speaking after being sent to Prosperous House as a child. Poppy was the family storyteller and August is desperate to find the precious book that he had spent his last energies compiling.

'The Yield also tells the story of Reverend Greenleaf, who recalls founding the first mission at Prosperous House and recording the language of the first residents, before being interred as an enemy of the people, being German, during the First World War.

'The Yield, in exquisite prose, carefully and delicately wrestles with questions of environmental degradation, pre-white contact agriculture, theft of language and culture, water, religion and consumption within the realm of a family mourning the death of a beloved man.'

Source: Publisher's blurb.

Works About this Award

Undercover Susan Wyndham , 2012 single work column
— Appears in: The Sydney Morning Herald , 10-11 November 2012; (p. 29)
A column canvassing current literary news including the projected annual appointment of a critic to the Australian Book Review periodical; announcement of the Big Fat Poetry Pig-Out event by Hampress, 2 December 2012; the winners of the Waverley Library Award for Literature, Alex Buzo Shortlist Prize, 2012; and the New South Wales Premier's Literary Awards, People's Choice Award shortlist.
Bookmarks Jason Steger , 2011 single work column
— Appears in: The Saturday Age , 21 May 2011; (p. 33)
Undercover Marc McEvoy , 2011 single work column
— Appears in: The Sydney Morning Herald , 30 April - 1 May 2011; (p. 29)
A column canvassing current literary news including a brief report on the establishment of the Victorian Prize for Literature. McEvoy also notes the final week for voting in the 2011 People's Choice Awards in the New South Wales Premier's Literary Awards and the joint launch of Kate Forsyth's The Starkin Crown and Belinda Murrell's The Ivory Rose.
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