The shortlist for the 2021 Miles Franklin Literary Award was announced yesterday. It’s a strange mix of mainly new-to-me authors writing about diverse — and topical — subjects, including illegal immigration, immigration and environmental disaster.
As per usual, I have only read one title on this list — Amanda Lohrey’s rather beautiful and contemplative novel, Labyrinth — but there’s a couple here (The Rain Heron and The Inland Sea) that are already on my TBR and which I might read as part of #20BooksofSummer.
Here are the nominees in alphabetical order by author’s surname. The summaries are from the Miles Franklin website. I’ve included availability information for international readers where possible:
Amnesty by Aravind Adiga (Pan Macmillan)
Danny – Dhananjaya Rajaratnam – is an illegal immigrant in Sydney having fled Sri Lanka. For three years he’s been trying to create a new identity for himself, but then one morning he learns a female client of his has been murdered. Should Danny come forward with knowledge he has about the crime and risk getting deported, or saying nothing? Over the course of a single day, he must wrestle with his conscience and decide if a person without rights still has responsibilities.
This book is available in the UK and USA in paperback and ebook editions.
The Rain Heron by Robbie Arnott (Text Publishing)
Robbie Arnott’s second novel is equal parts horror and wonder, and utterly gripping. Ren lives alone on the remote frontier of a country devastated by a coup. High on the forested slopes, she survives by hunting and trading – and forgetting. But when a young soldier comes to the mountains in search of a local myth, Ren is inexorably drawn into an impossible mission.
This book is available in the UK and USA in paperback and ebook editions.
At the Edge of the Solid World by Daniel Davis Wood (Brio Books)
In a village in the Swiss Alps, a husband and wife find their lives breaking apart following the death of their firstborn. On the other side of the world, in their hometown of Sydney, a man commits an act of shocking violence that captures international attention. As the husband recognises signs of his own grief in both the survivors and the perpetrator, his fixation on the case feeds into insomnia, trauma and an obsession with the terms on which we give value to human lives.
This book does not appear to be published outside of Australia.
The Labyrinth by Amanda Lohrey (Text Publishing)
This deeply meditative book follows Erica Marsden, who, in a state of grief, retreats to a quiet hamlet near the prison where her son, an artist, has been imprisoned for homicidal negligence. Living in a rundown shack, she obsesses over creating a labyrinth by the ocean. To build it, Erica will need the help of strangers. This is a hypnotic story of guilt and denial as well as a meditation on how art can be both ruthlessly destructive and restorative.
This book is available in the UK and USA in ebook format.
Lucky’s by Andrew Pippos (Pan Macmillan)
The book centres around Lucky, a second-generation Chicago-born clarinet-playing Greek man who finds himself in wartime Australia in the ’40s, escaping service by impersonating “king of swing” Benny Goodman. Lucky comes into money through personal tragedy and uses it to run a successful franchise of cafe diners. Spanning decades, this unforgettable epic tells a story about lives bound together by the pursuit of love, family, and new beginnings.
This book does not appear to be published outside of Australia.
The Inland Sea by Madeleine Watts (Pushkin Press)
This debut novel is about coming of age in a dying world and exploring our capacity for harming ourselves, each other and the world around us. Facing the open wilderness of adulthood, our young narrator finds that the world around her is coming undone. She works part-time as an emergency dispatch operator, tracking the fires and floods that rage across Australia during an increasingly unstable year. Drinking heavily, sleeping with strangers, she finds herself wandering Sydney’s streets late at night as she navigates a troubled affair with an ex-lover. Reckless and adrift, she begins to contemplate leaving.
This book is available in the UK and USA in hardcover and ebook editions.
The winner of the $60,000 prize will be named on 15 July, which doesn’t leave that much time to read the entire shortlist, if that’s what you plan on doing!
You can read the official press release here. And read what The Guardian has to say about it here.
Have you read any of these books? Or have any piqued your interest?
You know this already: if Labyrinth doesn’t win, I am going to sulk…
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Lol! I’ve already seen plenty of sulking by other people on Twitter because various books didn’t make the cut.
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Of course. My sulking will be dignified…
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I’ve been thinking I need to read more Australian novels, having only read a very few. I just tried a Jane Harper novel just based on how popular she is (and the setting of Tasmania) but wasn’t that impressed with it. Maybe it would be a better idea to pick a book or two from the Miles Franklin shortlist or winners list. Do you have any recommendations? I have just read some Elizabeth Harrower, a few Peter Temple books, some of Peter Carey, and of course My Brilliant Career. I have one Nevil Shute on my upcoming Classics Club list.
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Well, that Jane Harper novel isn’t very good. Her debut, The Dry, was wonderful though.
All the Australian books I have reviewed are here: https://readingmattersblog.com/tag/australian-literature/
And some of my favourites are listed here: https://readingmattersblog.com/2019/08/09/10-favourite-australian-novels-of-the-21st-century/
If you are looking for classics, I can recommend The Shiralee, The Merry-go-round in the Sea, Fairyland, Careful He Might Hear You and Aunts Up the Cross, all of which have been reviewed here.
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Thanks!
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Amnesty and Lucky’s are the two that jump out at me here, though of course one can’t be got hold of! An interesting and world-spanning list!
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It’s funny but I have seen Lucky’s EVERYWHERE here and read lots of positive reviews, but it just doesn’t appeal… I’m not sure why.
The list is interesting this year… there tends to be a move away from books about trauma/abuse survivors and looking more at stories about belonging / identity, which is a welcome topic shift.
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I have a copy of The Rain Heron, which is the only one here I’ve heard of.
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I have a copy of the Rain Heron but not sure I will get to it in time for the winner’s announcement.
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I’ve had The Rain Heron for a while but haven’t got to read it – like you I doubt I will get to it before the prize is announced.
Adiga seems a very versatile author. I enjoyed White Tiger and Last Man in The Tower but they are very different to this one
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