The Australian/Vogel Literary Award
The Australian/Vogel Literary Award is an Australian literary award for unpublished manuscripts by writers under the age of 35. The prize money, currently A$20,000, is the richest and most prestigious award for an unpublished manuscript in Australia. The rules of the competition include that the winner's work be published by Allen & Unwin.[1]
The award was initiated in 1979 by Niels Stevns[1] and is a collaboration between The Australian newspaper, the publisher Allen & Unwin, and Stevns & Company Pty Ltd. Stevns, founder of the company which makes Vogel bread, named the award in honour of Swiss naturopath Alfred Vogel.
Winners[]
- 2021 – , Now That I See You[2]
- 2020 – , A Treacherous Country[3]
- 2019 – No prize awarded[4]
- 2018 – , The Yellow House
- 2017 – , The Lost Pages
- 2016 – , The Memory Artist
- 2015 – , When There’s Nowhere Else to Run
- 2014 – Christine Piper, After Darkness
- 2013 – No prize awarded
- 2012 – Paul D. Carter, Eleven Seasons
- 2011 – Rohan Wilson, The Roving Party
- 2010 -
- 2009 – , Night Street and , Utopian Man
- 2008 – , Document Z
- 2007 – , I Dream of Magda
- 2006 – Belinda Castles, The River Baptists
- 2005 – Andrew O'Connor, Tuvalu
- 2004 – Julienne van Loon, Road Story
- 2003 – , Drown Them in the Sea and , Troubled Waters
- 2002 – Danielle Wood, The Alphabet of Light and Dark
- 2001 – Sarah Hay, Skins
- 2000 – , The Artist is a Thief
- 1999 – , Love and Vertigo
- 1998 – , Pegasus in the Suburbs
- 1997 – Eva Sallis, Hiam
- 1996 – Bernard Cohen, The Blindman's Hat
- 1995 – , Kindling Does For Firewood
- 1994 – Darren Williams, Swimming in Silk
- 1993 – Helen Demidenko, The Hand That Signed the Paper
- 1992 – Fotini Epanomitis, The Mule's Foal
- 1991 – Andrew McGahan, Praise
- 1990 – Gillian Mears, The Mint Lawn
- 1989 – Mandy Sayer, Mood Indigo
- 1988 – Tom Flood, Oceana Fine
- 1987 – , Ilias
- 1986 – , Glace Fruits
- 1985 – No prize awarded
- 1984 – Kate Grenville, Lilian's Story
- 1983 – , Shields of Trell
- 1982 – Brian Castro, Birds of Passage and Nigel Krauth, Matilda, My Darling
- 1981 – , Al Jazzar and Tim Winton, An Open Swimmer
- 1980 – Archie Weller, The Day of the Dog (Weller was initially runner-up to Paul Radley, who was disqualified after admitting that his manuscript was actually written by his uncle, who was also older than 35.[5])
Notes[]
- ^ a b Goodwin (1986) p. 270
- ^ Steger, Jason (30 April 2021). "How truth and fiction won Emma Batchelor this year's Vogel Award". The Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved 30 April 2021.
- ^ "'A Treacherous Country' wins 2020 Vogel". Books+Publishing. 20 April 2020. Retrieved 20 April 2020.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: url-status (link) - ^ "No Vogel to be awarded this year". Books+Publishing. 14 May 2019. Retrieved 14 May 2019.
- ^ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 26 September 2007. Retrieved 5 November 2006.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link) Lists of Bests, winners of the Australian/Vogel Literary Award, website accessed 5 November 2006
References[]
- Goodwin, Ken (1986) A History of Australian Literature, Basingstoke, Macmillan
- The History of The Australian/Vogel Literary Award (Allen & Unwin)
Categories:
- Australian literary awards
- Awards established in 1979