Free freight for all book orders

main image

Text’s Design Director W. H. Chong won the 2013 Joyce Thorpe Nicholson Design Hall of Fame Award at last night’s Australian Publishers Association Book Design Awards.

This award is presented to a designer whose work has made a significant contribution to book design in Australia. The judges said that the Joyce Thorpe Nicholson Award ‘is a most fitting and deserving acknowledgement as Chong has been an inspirational designer, teacher, mentor and force within the publishing industry for decades.’

Chong’s design for Murray Bail’s The Voyage also won Best Designed Cover of the Year Award, and shared the Best Designed Literary Fiction Book Award (with Allison Colpys' and Miriam Rosenbloom’s cover for Amy Espeseth’s Sufficient Grace).

Chong has won several APA Book Design Awards in the past, including 2012’s Best Designed Children’s Cover and Best Designed Young Adult Book for Bernard Beckett’s August, and 2011’s Best Designed Cover of the Year and Best Designed Literary Fiction Book for Lloyd Jones' Hand Me Down World.

 

Text Awards

This month has seen Text books and authors garner a staggering number of awards, shortlistings and longlistings. See the full list below. Congratulations to all!

main image Bail_Voyage-rgb-large flounderingFINAL

  • Toni Jordan’s Nine Days was named Best Fiction book at the 2013 Independent Booksellers of Australia Awards. On accepting her award, Toni said ‘If it wasn’t for the support of independent booksellers who took the time and trouble to read it and like it and put it in people’s hands, I’d be stuffed…Lucky for me, independent booksellers love books and they love Australian writing and they give books like mine a chance. I’m very grateful for their faith and support. I wouldn’t have a career without them.’
  • Murray Bail’s The Voyage has been shortlisted for the Christina Stead Prize for Fiction in the 2013 NSW Premier’s Literary Awards. Winners will be announced on 19 May as part of the Sydney Writers’ Festival. You can vote for The Voyage in the People’s Choice Award here.

Flynn_TigerinEden-sml Taylor_Booker_B Wakefield_FridayBrown_rgb

  • Romy Ash’s Floundering and Chris Flynn’s A Tiger in Eden have both been shortlisted for the 2013 Commonwealth Book Prize. The Commonwealth Book Prize is awarded annually to a debut novel by a Commonwealth citizen. Cory Taylor’s Me and Mr Booker was the winner for the Pacific region in last year’s prize. (Cory’s new book, My Beautiful Enemy, is out this month.) Regional winners will be announced on 14 May and the overall winners presented at Hay Festival on 31 May.
  • Romy Ash’s Floundering has also been longlisted for the 2013 Miles Franklin Literary Award. The shortlist will be announced on 30 April at the State Library of New South Wales, with the winner presented at the National Library of Australia in Canberra on 19 June.
  • Floundering has also been longlisted for the 2013 Dobbie Award, which recognises the work of a first-time published Australian woman. The shortlist will be announced on 5 June and the winners on 24 July.

Ozeki_TaleforTimeBeing_rgb Rash_NothingGold_rgb Kadare_Fall_Stone_City_rgb

  • Vikki Wakefield’s Friday Brown is on the Children’s Book Council of Australia shortlist for older readers. It has also been named a 2013 Notable Book. The winners will be announced on 16 August.
  • Ruth Ozeki’s A Tale for the Time Being has been shortlisted in the adult category of the UK Independent Bookseller Award. The winners will be announced on 29 June.
  • Ron Rash’s Nothing Gold Can Stay is on the longlist for the 2013 Frank O'Connor International Short Story Award. Rash won this award in 2011 for his collection Burning Bright. The shortlist will be made public in late May and the winner announced in July.

Anam_GoldenAge_rgb Hall_RawSharkB Williams_Breasts_rgb

  • Ismail Kadare’s The Fall of the Stone City has been shortlisted for the Independent Foreign Fiction Prize. This prize is awarded annually to the best work of contemporary fiction in translation. The winner will be announced on 20 May.
  • Tahmima Anam and Steven Hall have both been recognised on Granta’s 2013 list of the 20 most promising British novelists under 40. Authors on earlier lists include such luminaries as Martin Amis, Ian McEwan, Pat Barker and Rose Tremain. See the full list here.
  • Florence Williams' Breasts: A Natural and Unnatural History is a Los Angeles Times Book Prize 2012 winner in the Science and Technology category. See the full list of prize winners here.
 

main image Flynn_TigerinEden-sml

The shortlist for the 2013 Commonwealth Book Prize has just been announced, and we’re delighted that Romy Ash’s Floundering and Chris Flynn’s A Tiger in Eden have made the cut.

The Commonwealth Book Prize is awarded annually to a debut novel by a Commonwealth citizen. Cory Taylor’s Me and Mr Booker was the winner for the Pacific region in last year’s prize.

Regional winners will be announced on 14 May and the overall winners presented at Hay Festival on 31 May.

See the full shortlist here.

 

main image

The longlist for the 2013 Miles Franklin Literary Award has just been announced, and we’re delighted that Romy Ash’s debut novel, Floundering, is in the running to win this $60,000 prize.

The shortlist will be announced on 30 April at the State Library of New South Wales, with the winner presented at the National Library of Australia in Canberra on 19 June.

You can see the full list of longlisted titles—on which, it should be noted, eight of the ten books listed are by women—here.

 

main imgae

Toni Jordan’s Nine Days has been named Best Fiction book at the 2013 Independent Booksellers of Australia Awards, presented at Berkelouw Bookstore last night.

On collecting her award, Toni said:

Nine Days is a novel with nine first-person narrators and a mixed-up chronology. It’s not an easy book to explain. If it wasn’t for the support of independent booksellers who took the time and trouble to read it and like it and put it in people’s hands, I’d be stuffed. It’s been that way since the beginning of my writing career: when I wrote my first novel, I had no public profile, no ‘platform’. I’d never been on Big Brother and I’d never slept with a footballer. My first novel, Addition, was a romantic comedy about a woman with OCD. OCD is not normally considered romantic or funny. Lucky for me, independent booksellers love books and they love Australian writing and they give books like mine a chance. I’m very grateful for their faith and support. I wouldn’t have a career without them.

The Indie Awards are voted on by independent booksellers of Australia. You can see the full list of winning titles here.

 

main image

WH Chong’s beautiful cover for Murray Bail’s The Voyage has been shortlisted in the literary fiction category in this year’s APA Book Design Awards.

The winners in each category will be announced at an awards ceremony on 23 May during the Sydney Writers’ Festival.

See the full list of shortlisted titles here, and take a look at the covers of other shortlisted titles here.

 

main image Wayne_Macauley_3

Wayne Macauley’s The Cook has won the Most Underrated Book Award of 2012, announced at last night’s gala at the Independent Publishing Conference.

Sponsored by Kobo and run by the Small Press Network (SPUNC), the Most Underrated Book Award aims to shine a light on some of the fantastic titles that are released by independent publishers and members of the Small Press Network (SPUNC) that, for whatever reason, did not receive their fair dues.

Readings is offering 20% off The Cook for the rest of November. Pick up a copy and see what you missed!

 

IMG_1388

Publisher Michael Heyward, Craig Sherborne, Senior Editor Penny Hueston and Craig’s partner, Janet.

Craig Sherborne has won the Best Writing Prize in the 2012 Melbourne Prize for Literature, announced at BMW Edge last night, for his debut novel, The Amateur Science of Love.

Sherborne_ScienceofLove-small

Alex Miller was the winner of the overall 2012 Melbourne Prize for Literature.

The Melbourne Prize is awarded every year, alternating between prizes for urbane sculpture, music and literature in a three-year cycle. The two previous winners of the Melbourne Prize for Literature were Helen Garner (2006) and Gerald Murnane (2009).

Don’t forget to vote in the Civic Choice Award here.

 

main image Sherborne_ScienceofLove-small RIPPINAngelCreekFINAL Wakefield_AllIEverWanted_rgb

The delayed 2012 NSW Premier’s Literary and History Awards shortlists have finally been announced, and Text is very well represented on them.

Kate Grenville’s Sarah Thornhill has been shortlisted for the Christina Stead Prize for Fiction and Craig Sherborne’s The Amateur Science of Love is up for the UTS Glenda Adams Award for New Writing. Sally Rippin’s book for younger readers, Angel Creek, is on the list for the Patricia Wrightson Prize, and Vikki Wakefield’s YA novel All I Ever Wanted is up for the Ethel Turner Prize. Both Raimond Gaita and Arnold Zable are on the shortlist for the Community Relations Commission for a Multicultural NSW Award for their works After Romulus and Violin Lessons respectively. Brenda Niall’s True North: The Story of Mary and Elizabeth Durack has also been shortlisted for the Australian History Prize.

Gaita_AfterRomulus_sml_hi-res Zable_ViolinLessons_Bfmt_rgb Niall_TrueNorth_rgb

The winners will be announced at an event on 30 November. You can vote in the People’s Choice Award for your favourite of the titles on the Christina Stead Prize shortlist—go here and vote for Sarah Thornhill!

 

main image Wayne_Macauley_3

Wayne Macauley’s The Cook has been shortlist in the Kobo-sponsored Most Underrated Book Award, a prize that aims to draw attention to fantastic works released by independent publishers and members of the Small Press Network that, in the opinion of the judges, received inadequate recognition upon initial publication.

Judges Amy Espeseth, Bethanie Blanchard and Andrew Wrathall said of The Cook:

Merciless satire fuels The Cook. The absorbing novel is funny while maintaining a strangely poignant tone. Questions regarding cultural complicity, spiritual poverty and popular obsessions tangle until its shocking end.

The other shortlisted titles are The Dark Wet by Jess Huon (Giramondo), I Hate Martin Amis et al. by Peter Barry (Transit Lounge) and Two Steps Forward by Irma Gold (Affirm Press).

The winner will be announced at the opening of the Independent Publishing Conference at the Wheeler Centre on 8 November. Readings will be offering a 20% discount on shortlisted titles throughout November.

 

_Temple07_credit_Candy_Bryce Wayne_Macauley_3 Craig_S-1062-12mb

The finalists in the Melbourne Prize for Literature 2012 have been announced, and we’re delighted that three of our authors—Peter Temple, Wayne Macauley and Craig Sherborne—are on the list.

Peter Temple has been shortlisted in the Melbourne Prize for Literature, which recognises the body of work of a Victorian author that has made an outstanding contribution to Australian literature and to cultural and intellectual life.

Wayne Macauley’s The Cook and Craig Sherborne’s The Amateur Science of Love have been shortlisted for the Best Writing Award, given to a Victorian author for a work of outstanding clarity, originality and creativity.

An exhibition of the finalists will be held in the Atrium at Federation Square from 5 to 19 November. The winners will be announced on 7 November.

You can win a luxury stay at the Sofitel Melbourne by voting for your favourite author in the Civic Choice Award. Go here and vote today!

 

main image Wakefield_AllIEverWanted_rgb

Congratulations to Kate Grenville and Vikki Wakefield, both shortlisted authors in the just-announced Queensland Literary Awards!

Kate Grenville’s Sarah Thornhill has been shortlisted for the Fiction Award, and Vikki Wakefield’s All I Ever Wanted for the Young Adult Book Award. You can see the full shortlists here.

Christopher Currie has also been shortlisted in the brand new Courier Mail People’s Choice Queensland Book of the Year award for his debut novel, The Ottoman Motel. Make sure you vote for Chris here.

The likelihood of a Queensland literary award was in serious doubt earlier this year after the cancellation of the Queensland Premier’s Literary Awards. An intrepid band of dedicated book lovers quickly stepped in to ensure that this would not be the case. Visit the Queensland Literary Awards website to learn more and to support this great cause.

 

main image Niall_TrueNorth_rgb Wakefield_AllIEverWanted_rgb

The shortlists for the 2012 Victorian Premier’s Literary Awards were made public today and we’re delighted that Wayne Macauley, Brenda Niall and Vikki Wakefield have all been recognised for their work.

Wayne Macauley’s The Cook is on the shortlist for fiction, Brenda Niall’s True North: The Story of Mary and Elizabeth Durack for non-fiction and Vikki Wakefield’s All I Ever Wanted in the YA category.

You can see the full shortlists here and vote for your favourite book in the People’s Choice category. Winners will be announced at the awards dinner on 16 October.

 

main image

The regional winners of the Commonwealth Book Prize were announced today, and our very own Cory Taylor has won in the Pacific Region for Me and Mr Booker!

Margaret Busby, Chair of the Commonwealth Book Prize, said, ‘We were wonderfully spoilt for choice among some strong regional contenders on the shortlist, and although we could not take every favourite further, the books that triumphed are a reminder of what the best fiction can be: moving, entertaining, enlightening, exciting, engaging our thoughts and emotions, while creating an intimate connection with someone else’s imagination. Here are novels with memorable characters, unpredictable situations, a sense of humour, books that give insights into cultures and histories not our own, crafted by writers who care about language, and its ability to renew and enrich our view of the world.’

You can see the full list of winners here. The overall winner will be announced at Hay Festival in Wales on 8 June.

Congratulations, Cory!

 

We had a great week last week, capped off by two wins at Friday night’s Australian Book Industry Awards.

Main image

Here’s Kate Grenville accepting her award for General Fiction Book of the Year for Sarah Thornhill.

Picture_8

And here’s publisher Michael Heyward accepting the award for Small Publisher of the Year.

You can read Michael’s op-ed piece on how to rekindle interest in the great Australian stories here. Stephen Romei, literary editor of the Australian, sums up the ABIA night here.

These wins came after the two prizes won at the APA Book Design Awards for Bernard Beckett’s August, and Jane Higgins' The Bridge’s honour award at the New Zealand Post Children’s Book Awards.

Congrats to all the winners!

 

main image

The 2012 APA Book Design Awards were announced last night, and we’re delighted to report that brilliant designers Chong and Susan Miller received two awards for the design of Bernard Beckett’s August!

August was judged to be the best YA cover (by Chong) and the best designed children’s book for 2012, and was described as ‘a fantastically clever and disconcerting design’. You can read more about the awards in today’s Sydney Morning Herald.

Congratulations, Chong and Susan!

 

main image

Vikki Wakefield with Federal Arts Minister Simon Crean

Vikki Wakefield’s debut novel, All I Ever Wanted, won the Young Adult category of the 2012 Adelaide Festival Awards for Literature.

All I Ever Wanted is the story of Mim, on the cusp of finishing school and eager to start a new life as far away as possible from her criminal family and dodgy suburb. But over the nine days before her seventeenth birthday, Mim’s life turns upside down—and in the end, the same things look entirely different.

All I Ever Wanted has garnered effusive praise and a legion of fans. We spoke to Vikki about her writing process and her new work.

All_I_Ever_Wanted

Did you always want to write books for younger readers?

I started reading adult novels when I was about twelve. I’d exhausted the limited range of young adult novels I could get my hands on and the YA genre was still unformed, but those few books I loved (like The Chocolate War and The Outsiders) I’ve never forgotten. These contemporary novels weren’t about pure escapism, happy endings or loaded with moral instruction. They made me feel, for a while, like I was living somebody else’s life, and I could see pieces of my own reflected in a book.

When I started writing longer fiction, I rediscovered the YA genre. While I was gone, it had come of age. Here were the books I yearned for when I was stuck in that rut between childhood and adulthood. The first voice that came to me when I opened a new Word document and typed ‘Shitty First Draft’ (thank you, Anne Lamott), was Mim’s, and the first words that came were ‘It’s easy…’—‘cause it ain’t.

So, I didn’t really decide to write for young adults. I was naïve about writing. I had no idea where Mim’s story would fit, and I didn’t care. Halfway through, I sensed that the novel would fit into the YA genre, but when I started writing I was really writing for my in-between, sixteen-year-old self.

All I Ever Wanted was your debut, and you’re working on your next book, Friday Brown, now. Does the process get easier after your first book is published?

I thought it would be easier, but it isn’t. I’m wiser about the process, but I’m not any better at controlling it. There are good days and bad days. I just have to keep showing up; eventually the good stuff floats.

With All I Ever Wanted, there was just me and the page. I dared myself to write and, beyond finishing the novel, I had no expectation. The second book will be born in the public eye. Now it’s me, my publisher, my editor, my readers, reviewers, the media…and on. That’s a lot of people behind my desk.

If the writing wasn’t difficult, I’d be suspicious. When I’m completely lost in the my first draft, I know it leaves room for layers to separate and themes to emerge, rather than starting with a one-dimensional, fully-formed story. Not knowing where my characters are taking me is compelling and if I knew where I was going I’d be bored. There’s nothing linear about my process—it’s messy and complicated and most often a case of two steps forward, one step back, three sideways.

Some things are easier. I’m more aware of my bad habits; I’m no longer fixated on word-count (I know now that a story is as long as it needs to be—no more, no less); I’m not afraid to cut a massive chunk of perfectly good writing because it doesn’t belong. I don’t worry that I’ll run out of ideas any more.

VW

Vikki accepts her award.

Do you have any advice for aspiring YA writers?

The contemporary YA books that stay with me are those with imperfect, nuanced characters. A writer’s voice is important, but with first-person narrative (a common YA viewpoint) it should be subtle. It’s the bones of a story, not the substance. The key to creating a story that is whole and unique is character voice—once you find that, the rest will fall into place.

Don’t be afraid to take your readers to dark places—teenagers aren’t immune to tragedy and loss. Try to play up the contrast between light and shade. Contrast gives a story depth, as it does in a great film, a beautiful painting, or a memorable piece of music.

Probably the best piece of advice is the most commonly given: just write. I wasted so much time researching sites that tell you how to get published instead of actually writing. There’s only one way to get published—write a good book. Channel your energy into that. The rest is just postage and patience.

 

main image

Congratulations to WH Chong, whose design for Bernard Beckett’s August has been shortlisted in three categories in the 2012 APA Book Design Awards.

Part philosophical thriller, part love story, August is a compelling novel of power, humanity and desire. Trapped in a car wreck, upside down, bleeding, broken and in pain, Tristan and Grace are staring at death. As they await their fate, with only a glimmer of hope they might be seen and rescued, we discover the stories of their lives, the sequences of events that brought them together and the shocking truth behind the cause of their crash.

August is up for Best Designed Children’s Cover of the Year, Best Designed Young Adult Book and overall Best Designed Cover of the Year. The winners will be announced at a ceremony in Sydney on 17 May.

We asked our august designer a few questions about the process behind this incredible cover.

Where did the inspiration for the design come from?

As I try to do each time, I read the manuscript. The idea offered itself within two pages. So, concept follows content. (But it was the kind of book which I read all the way through.)

August was published for both adults and younger readers. Are there particular design difficulties with such a broad brief?

Yes. The past is a foreign country and young people don’t go there.

Let me put it this way: for boomers, Joni Mitchell and Neil Young still seem alluring; for slightly younger folk, they regret their days among the Sex Pistols and Depeche Mode; then we have a long gap with, eventually, even younger folk emoting to Nirvana and various shoegazers; and suddenly it’s entirely hip hop and gangsta rap. I don’t know anyone who listens to Joni and D Mode and Snoop Dogg. But then, again everyone listens to ancient Lenny Cohen, so maybe you just have to go extreme classic.

What do you think of the UK edition of August, which used the same image but turned it upside down, losing the visual pun?

(Slaps head) That’s like Tarte Tatin served with the pastry on top! Sufferin' succotash.

Are your cover designs now influenced by a consideration of how the book will appear in e-format?

Should. But it’s pitiful if we only have eyes for 120 x 150 pixels.

August by Bernard Beckett, available now from Text Publishing and at all good bookstores.