List of Australian novelists
This is a list of novelists living in Australia or publishing significantly while living there.
A
- J. H. M. Abbott (1874–1953), Sally : The Tale of a Currency Lass (1918)
- Azhar Abidi (born 1968), Passarola Rising (2006), Twilight (2008), The House of Bilqis (2009)
- Glenda Adams (1939–2007), Games of the Strong (1982), Longleg (1990), The Tempest of Clemenza (1996), Miles Franklin Award winner (1987) for Dancing on Coral
- Debra Adelaide (born 1958), The Hotel Albatross (1995), Serpent Dust (1998), The Household Guide to Dying (2008)
- Alexandra Adornetto (born 1992), The Strangest Adventures series
- Malcolm Afford (1906–1954), The Gland Men of the Island (Wonder Stories pp. 828–843, January 1931), Blood on His Hands!: A Detective Novel (1936), Death's Mannikins: Being a Sober Account of Certain Diabolical Happenings not Untinged with the Odour of Brimstone which Befell a Respectable Family Living at Exmoor in This Present Year (1937), The Dead Are Blind: A Jeffrey Blackburn Adventure (1937), Fly By Night: A Jeffrey Blackburn Adventure (1942), Owl of Darkness (1944), Sinners in Paradise (1946), The Sheep and the Wolves (1947), The Vanishing Trick, Detective Fiction 1.1 (1948), Such a Neat Little Corpse (1950?)
- Maggie Alderson (born 1959), Pants on Fire (2000), Mad About the Boy (2002), Handbags and Gladrags (2004), Cents and Sensibility (2006), How to Break Your Own Heart (2008), Shall We Dance (2010), Evangeline: The Wish Keeper's Helper (2011), Everything Changes But You (2012)
- James Aldridge (born 1918), Signed with Their Honour (1942), The Sea Eagle (1944), The Diplomat (1949), The Hunter (1950), Heroes of the Empty View (1954), I Wish He Would Not Die (1957), A Captive in the Land (1962), My Brother Tom (1966), The Untouchable Juli (1974), Mockery In Arms (1974), The Marvellous Mongolian (1974), One Last Glimpse (1977), Goodbye Un-America (1979), The Broken SaddleThe True Story of Lilli Stubeck (1984), The True Story of Spit Macphee (1986) (winner of the Guardian Prize and New South Wales Premier's Literary Award), The True Story of Lola Mackellar (Viking, 1992), The Girl from the Sea (2002), The Wings of Kitty St Clair (2006)
- Ethel Anderson (1883–1958), Indian Tales (1948), At Parramatta (1956), The Little Ghosts (1959)
- Jessica Anderson (1916–2010), An Ordinary Lunacy (1963), The Last Man's Head (1970), The Commandant (1975), The Impersonators (1980), Miles Franklin Literary Award winner in 1978 for Tirra Lirra by the River and in 1980 for The Impersonators), Taking Shelter (1989), One of the Wattle Birds (1994)
- Sarah Armstrong (born 1968), Miles Franklin Literary Award nominee 2005 for Salt Rain
- Thea Astley (1925–2004), Girl with a Monkey (1958), A Descant for Gossips (1960), The Well Dressed Explorer (1962), The Slow Natives (1965), A Boat Load of Home Folk (1968), The Acolyte (1972), A Kindness Cup (1974), An Item from the Late News (1982), Beachmasters (1985), It's Raining in Mango (1987), Reaching Tin River (1990), Vanishing Points (1992), Coda (1994), The Multiple Effects of Rainshadow (1996), Drylands (1999), Miles Franklin Literary Award winner in 1999 for Drylands, 1972 for The Acolyte, 1965 for The Slow Natives, and 1962 for The Well Dressed Explorer
- Hugh Atkinson (1924–1994), The Pink and the Brown (1957), Low Company (1961), The Reckoning (1963), The Games (1968), The Most Savage Animal (1972), Johnny Horns (1972), The Man in the Middle (1973), Crack-up (1974), Weekend to Kill (1977), Unscheduled Flight (1978), The Manipulators (1978), Billy Two-Toes (1982), Grey's Valley: The Legend (1986), A Twist in the Tale: Three Novellas (1991), Jumping Jeweller of Lavender Bay (1992)
- Louisa Atkinson (1834–1872), Gertrude the Emigrant: A Tale of Colonial Life by an Australian Lady (1857), Cowanda: The Veteran's Grant: an Australian Story by the Author of Gertrude (1859), Debatable Ground of the Carlillawarra Claimants (1861), Myra (1864), Tom Hellicar's Children (1871), Bush Home (?), Tressa's Resolve (1872)
- Bunty Avieson (born 1962), Apartment 255 (2002), The Wrong Door (2004)
B
- Murray Bail (born 1941), Homesickness (1980), Holden's Performance (1987), Miles Franklin Literary Award winner 1999 for Eucalyptus (1998), The Pages (2008), The Voyage (2012)
- Allan Baillie (born 1943), Creature (1987), Mates and Other Stories (1989), Dream Catcher and Other Stories (1995), The Phone Book (1995), Ten Out of Ten (2003), A Taste of Cockroach (2005)
- Faith Bandler (1918-2015), Wacvie (1977)
- Marjorie Barnard (1897–1987), The Persimmon Tree, and Other Stories (1943), (as M. Barnard Eldershaw) A House is Built (1929), Green Memory (1931), The Glasshouse (1936), Plaque with Laurel (1937), Tomorrow and Tomorrow and Tomorrow (1945)
- John Arthur Barry (1850–1911), The Luck of the Native Born (1898), A Son of the Sea (1899)
- Max Barry (born 1973), Syrup (1999), Jennifer Government (2003), Company (2006)
- Catherine Bateson (born 1960), A Dangerous Girl (2000), The Year It All Happened (2001), Painted Love Letters (2002), His Name is Fire (2006)
- Barbara Baynton (1862–1929), Human Toll (1907)
- George Lewis Becke (1855–1913)
- Randolph Bedford (1868–1941), True Eyes and the Whirlwind (1903), The Snare of Strength (1905), Sops of Wine (1909), Billy Pagan Mining Engineer (1911), The Mates of Torres (1911), The Lady of the Pickup (1911), The Silver Star (1917), Aladdin and the Boss Cockie (1919)
- Larissa Behrendt (born 1969), Home (2004), Legacy (2009)
- Barbara Biggs (born 1956), Chat Room (2006)
- Carmel Bird (born 1940), Cherry Ripe (1986), Bluebird Cafe (1990), The White Garden (1996), Crisis (1996), Red Shoes (1998), Unholy Writ (2000), Open for Inspection (2002), Cape Grimm (2005), Child of the Twilight (2010)
- John Birmingham (born 1964), Axis of Time trilogy (publication commenced 2004), He Died with a Felafel in His Hand (1994)
- Dora Birtles (1903–1992), The Overlanders (1946), Pioneer Shack (1947)
- Marie Bjelke-Petersen (1874–1969), The Captive Singer (1917), The Immortal Flame (1919), Dusk: A Novel (1921), Jewelled Nights (1923), The Moon Minstrel (1927), Monsoon Music (1930), The Rainbow Lute (1932), The Silver Knight (1934), Jungle Night (1937)
- Georgia Blain (born 1964)
- Merlinda Bobis (born 1959), Filipino expatriate, Banana Heart Summer (2005); also poet
- Rolf Boldrewood (Thomas Alexander Browne) (1826–1915), My Run Home (1874), The Squatter's Dream: A Story of Australian Life (1875), A Colonial Reformer (1876), Babes in the Bush (1877), Robbery Under Arms (1882), The Sealskin Coat (1884–1885), The Crooked Stick, or, Pollie's Probation (1885), The Sphinx of Eaglehawk: A Tale of Old Bendigo (1887), A Sydney-Side Saxon (1888), Nevermore (1889–90), The Miner's Right : A Tale of the Australian Goldfields (1890), A Modern Buccaneer (1894), Plain Living: A Bush Idyll (1898), War to the Knife', or Tangata Maori (1899), The Ghost-Camp, or, The Avengers (1902), The Last Chance: A Tale of the Golden West (1905)
- Guy Boothby (1867–1905), Doctor Nikola series
- Martin Boyd (1893–1972), Brangane: A Memoir (by Martin Mills, pseudonym) (1926); The Picnic (1937), Lucinda Brayford (1946), The "Langton" quartet: The Cardboard Crown (1952); A Difficult Young Man (1955); Outbreak of Love (1957); When Blackbirds Sing (1962)
- Russell Braddon (1921–1995), The Naked Island
- James Bradley (born 1967), Wrack (1997); The Deep Field (1999), The Resurrectionist (2006)
- Bertha Southey Brammall (1878–1957), Dusky Dell (1898), The Mystery of Four Corners (1918)
- Lily Brett (born 1946), Things Could Be Worse (1990), What God Wants (1992), Just Like That (1994), Too Many Men (2001), You Gotta Have Balls (2006), Lola Bensky (2013)
- Paul Brickhill (1916–1991), WWII RAAF fighter pilot, The Great Escape (1950)
- Damien Broderick (born 1944), science fiction, The Judas Mandala
- Steve Brook (born 1934), Polish-born journalist and satirical novelist
- Geraldine Brooks (born 1955), Pulitzer Prize for fiction, 2006:[1] March (2005); Year of Wonders (2001), also Pulitzer Prize–winning journalist
- Carter Brown (1923–1985), crime fiction
- Anna Maria Bunn (1808–1889), The Guardian: A Tale (1838)
- Janine Burke (born 1952), Speaking (1984), Second Sight (1986), Company of Images (1989), Lullaby (1994)
C
- Kathleen Caffyn (c. 1855–1926)
- Mena Calthorpe (c. 1905–1996)
- Ada Cambridge (1844–1926)
- Marion May Campbell (born 1948)
- Rosa Campbell Praed (1851–1935)
- Trudi Canavan (born 1969)
- Gabrielle Carey (born 1959), Puberty Blues
- Peter Carey (born 1943), Illywhacker, Oscar and Lucinda, twice Booker Prize Winner and three time Miles Franklin Award winner
- Isobelle Carmody (born 1958), The Gathering (1993)
- Steven Carroll (born 1949)
- Jay Caselberg, science fiction
- Deirdre Cash (1924–1963), The Delinquents
- Belinda Castles (born 1971), The River Baptists, 2006 Australian/Vogel Literary Award winner
- Brian Castro (born 1950)
- Nancy Cato (1917–2000)
- Nick Cave (born 1957)
- Arlene J. Chai (born 1955)
- Joy Chambers
- Nan Chauncy (1900–1970)
- Margaret Clark (born 1942), Fat Chance (1996)
- Marcus Clarke (1846–1881), For the Term of his Natural Life
- James Clavell (1924–1994), Shogun, also screenwriter, director (the original The Fly)
- Jon Cleary (born 1917)
- Inga Clendinnen (born 1934), Reading the Holocaust (1999); Dancing with Strangers (2004)
- Charmian Clift (1923–1969)
- Jane Clifton (born 1961)
- J. M. Coetzee (born 1940), South African born writer who emigrated to Australia in 2002, and became an Australian citizen in 2006[2]
- Bernard Cohen (born 1963), The Blindman's Hat 1996 Australian/Vogel Literary Award winner
- Tom Collins, Such Is Life, see Joseph Furphy below
- Jill Ker Conway (born 1934)
- Kenneth Cook (1929–1987), Wake in Fright
- Peter Corris (born 1942), crime fiction[3]
- Bryce Courtenay (1933–2012), The Power of One
- Jessie Catherine Couvreur (1848–1897)
- Bernard Cronin (1884–1968)
- Zora Cross (1890–1964)
- Dymphna Cusack (1902–1981)
D
- John Bede Dalley (1878–1935)
- Eric Dando (born 1970), satirical novels Snail and Oink, Oink, Oink
- Eleanor Dark (1901–1985), Prelude to Christopher, The Timeless Land
- Helen Darville (Helen Demidenko) (born 1972), The Hand That Signed the Paper 1993
- Luke Davies (born 1962)
- Frank Dalby Davison (1893–1970)
- Liam Davison (born 1957)
- Carlton Dawe (1865–1935)
- Dulcie Deamer (1890–1972)
- Ralph De Boissière (born 1907)
- Michelle de Kretser, The Hamilton Case
- Joel Deane (born 1969)
- Kathryn Deans, children's fantasy
- Meaghan Delahunt (born 1961)
- Kit Denton (1928–1997), The Breaker
- Robert Dessaix (born 1944), Night Letters (1996)
- James Devaney (1890–1976)
- Jean Devanny (1894–1962)[4]
- Garry Disher (born 1949)
- András Domahidy (born 1920), writes in Hungarian
- Henrietta Drake-Brockman (1901–1968), Men Without Wives[5]
- Sara Dowse[6]
- Robert Drewe (born 1943), Our Sunshine (1991)
- Ursula Dubosarsky (born 1961)
- Alasdair Duncan (born 1982)
- Mary Durack (1913–1994), Kings in Grass Castles
E
- Nick Earls (born 1963)
- Arabella Edge, The Company: The Story of a Murderer
- Greg Egan (born 1961), science fiction
- Flora Eldershaw (1897–1956)
- M. Barnard Eldershaw, pseudonym for Flora Eldershaw and Marjorie Barnard
- Sumner Locke Elliott (1917–1991), Careful, He Might Hear You
- Matilda Jane Evans (1827–1886)
F
- Michel Faber (born 1960), The Crimson Petal and the White
- Delia Falconer (born 1966)
- Jennifer Fallon (born 1959), fantasy
- Margaret Fane (1887–1962),[7] novelist and poet
- Beverley Farmer (born 1941), The House in the Light
- Helen FitzGerald (born 1966), novelist and screenwriter, Dead Lovely (2007)
- John Flanagan (born 1944), Ranger's Apprentice
- Penny Flanagan (born 1970)
- Richard Flanagan (born 1961), Gould's Book of Fish
- Tom Flood (born 1955), Oceana Fine
- Mabel Forrest (1872–1935)
- David Foster (born 1944), The Glade Within the Grove (1997) Miles Franklin Award
- Miles Franklin (1879–1954), My Brilliant Career; her estate led to creation of the Miles Franklin Award
- Jackie French (born 1953)
- Mary Eliza Fullerton (1868–1946)
- Joseph Furphy (1843–1912), Such Is Life; nom de plume: Tom Collins
G
- Antonella Gambotto-Burke (born 1965)
- Helen Garner (born 1942), Monkey Grip, The Children's Bach, The Spare Room
- Mary Gaunt (1861–1942)
- Nikki Gemmell (born 1966), The Bride Stripped Bare
- Ruby Langford Ginibi (born 1934)
- Alan Gold (born 1945), historical novels
- Andrea Goldsmith (born 1950)
- Peter Goldsworthy (born 1951), Honk If You are Jesus (1992)
- Alan Gould (born 1949), To the Burning City, also poet
- Nathaniel Gould (1857–1919)
- Posie Graeme-Evans (born 1952)
- Richard Harry Graves (1898–1971)
- Evan Green (1930–1996)
- Kerry Greenwood (born 1954), crime fiction[8]
- Kate Grenville (born 1950), The Idea of Perfection (2001) Orange Prize for Fiction, The Secret River (2006) Commonwealth Writers' Prize
- Andy Griffiths (born 1961)
- Dick Gross (born 1954)
- Mrs Aeneas Gunn (Jeannie Gunn) (1870–1961), We of the Never Never
H
- Alfred Arthur Greenwood Hales (1860–1936)
- Rodney Hall (born 1935), Just Relations (1982), The Grisly Wife (1994) Miles Franklin Award; The Day We Had Hitler Home (2000)
- Marion Halligan (born 1940)
- Rosalie Ham (born 1955)
- Lyn Hancock (born 1938)
- Derek Hansen (born 1944)
- Lee Harding (born 1937), science fiction
- Traci Harding, fantasy
- Frank Hardy (1917–1994), Power Without Glory
- Alexander Harris (1805–1874)
- Elizabeth Harrower (born 1928), The Long Prospect
- Sonya Hartnett (born 1968)
- John Harwood (born 1946)
- Nicholas Hasluck (born 1944)
- Shirley Hazzard (born 1931), The Transit of Venus (1980) National Book Critics Circle Award, The Great Fire (2003) Miles Franklin Award
- Ruth Hegarty (born 1929), Is That You Ruthie?
- Rolf Heimann (born 1940)
- Anita Heiss (born 1968)
- John David Hennessey (1847–1935)
- Xavier Herbert (1901–1984), Capricornia (1938), Poor Fellow My Country (1975) Miles Franklin Award
- Dorothy Hewett (1923–2002), also poet and playwright
- Kathryn Heyman (born 1965)
- Jennifer Higgie
- Helen Hodgman (born 1945), Broken Words (1989) Christina Stead Fiction Prize
- Chloe Hooper (born 1973)
- Janette Turner Hospital (born 1942), Oyster (1996)
- Fergus Hume (1859–1932)
- Maria Hyland (born 1968), Carry Me Down
I
- David Ireland (born 1927), A Woman of the Future (1979), The Glass Canoe (1976) Miles Franklin Award
- Ian Irvine (born 1950)
J
- Antoni Jach (1956), Napoleon's Double, The Weekly Card Game, The Layers of the City
- Annamarie Jagose (born 1965), Slow Water
- Florence James (1902–1993), co-author of Come In Spinner with Dymphna Cusack
- Winifred Lewellin James (1876–1941)
- Charlotte Jay (Geraldine Halls) (1919–1996), crime fiction, Beat Not the Bones
- Barbara Jefferis (1917–2004)
- Kate Jennings (born 1948), Moral Hazard
- Paul Jennings (born 1943), children's literature, Wicked! (1998)
- Rebecca Johnson (born 1966)
- Dorothy Johnston (born 1948)
- George Johnston (1912–1970), My Brother Jack
- Martin Johnston (1947–1990), mainly poet
- Elizabeth Jolley (1923–2007), The Well, (1986) Miles Franklin Award
- Gail Jones (born 1955)
- Rae Desmond Jones (born 1941)
- Rod Jones (born 1953)
- Nicholas Jose (born 1952), Paper Nautilus, The Rose Crossing,The Custodians, The Red Thread
K
- Christopher Kelen (born 1958), also poet and artist
- Thomas Keneally (born 1935), Schindler's Ark (1985) Booker Prize winner, filmed as Schindler's List; Bring Larks and Heroes (1967) and Three Cheers for the Paraclete, (1968) Miles Franklin Award winners
- Cate Kennedy (born 1963), The World Beneath
- Robin Klein (born 1936)
- Christopher Koch (born 1932), The Doubleman (1985) and Highways to a War (1996), Miles Franklin Award winners
- Nigel Krauth (born 1949)
- Torsten Krol (possibly a pseudonym)
L
- Eric Lambert (1918–1966)
- Henry George Lamond (1885–1969)
- John Lang (1817–1864)
- Eve Langley (1908–1974)
- Coral Lansbury (1929–1991)
- Justine Larbalestier, young adult fantasy, Magic or Madness (1967)
- Will Lawson (1876–1957)[9]
- Simone Lazaroo[10]
- Kathy Lette (born 1958), Puberty Blues (1979) Girls' Night Out (1988)
- Ash Lieb (born 1982)[11][12]
- Joan Lindsay (1896–1984)
- Norman Lindsay (1879–1969), The Magic Pudding, also an artist
- Hilary Lofting (1881–1939),[13] short story and travel writing
- Amanda Lohrey (born 1947)
- Joan London (born 1958)
- Gabrielle Lord (born 1946), crime fiction
- Angelo Loukakis, The Memory of Tides (2006)
- Melissa Lucashenko[14]
- Dave Luckett (born 1951), children's fantasy, A Dark Winter (1997)
- Morris Lurie (born 1938), Seven Books for Grossman (1983), Patrick White Award 2006
M
- Hugh Mackay
- Kenneth Seaforth Mackenzie (1913–1955), Dead Men Rising
- Emily Maguire (born 1976)
- Jennifer Maiden (born 1949)
- Shane Maloney, crime fiction
- David Malouf (born 1934), Miles Franklin Award winner for The Great World
- Leonard Mann (1895–1981)[15]
- Frederic Manning (1882–1935)
- Kathleen Mannington Caffyn (c. 1855–1926)
- Melina Marchetta (born 1965), Looking For Alibrandi
- John Marsden (born 1950), best known for the Tomorrow series
- William Leonard Marshall (born 1944), detective fiction, Yellowthread Street
- Catherine Edith Macauley Martin (born 1847–1937)
- Olga Masters (1919–1986)
- Peter Mathers (1931–2004), Miles Franklin Award winner for Trap
- Mardi McConnochie (born 1971)
- Colleen McCullough (born 1937), The Thorn Birds
- Sandy McCutcheon (born 1947)
- Roger McDonald (born 1941), Miles Franklin Award winner for The Ballad of Desmond Kale
- Andrew McGahan (born 1966), Miles Franklin Award winner for The White Earth
- Ronald McKie (1909–1991), Miles Franklin Award winner for The Mango Tree
- Gillian Mears (born 1964), The Grass Sister Commonwealth Writers Prize (Regional) 1996
- Louisa Anne Meredith (1812–1895)
- Alex Miller (born 1936), Miles Franklin Award winner for The Ancestor Game and Journey to the Stone Country
- Drusilla Modjeska (born 1946), The Orchard (1994)
- Ian Moffitt (1926–2000)[16]
- James Moloney (born 1954)
- Frank Moorhouse (born 1938), Miles Franklin Award winner for Dark Palace
- Sally Morgan (born 1951), My Place
- Jaclyn Moriarty, young adult fiction
- Di Morrissey (born 1948), fiction
- Mudrooroo (formerly Colin Johnson), Wild Cat Falling[17]
- Gerald Murnane (born 1939)
- Joanna Murray-Smith (born 1962), Judgement Rock[18]
N
- Simpson Newland (1835–1925)
- Nerida Newton (born 1972), The Lambing Flat
- John Henry Nicholson (1838–1923)
- D'Arcy Niland (1919–1967), The Shiralee
- Hume Nisbet (1849–1923)
- Michael Noonan (1921–2000), The December Boys
- Louis Nowra (born 1950), better known as a playwright
- Judy Nunn (born 1945)
O
- Elizabeth O'Conner (born 1913), The Irishman, 1960 Miles Franklin Award winner
- Andrew T. O'Connor (born 1978), Tuvalu
- John O'Grady (1907–1981), They're a Weird Mob
- Wendy Orr, Canadian-born Australian children's writer, Nim's Island
- Ouyang Yu (born 1955), expatriate Chinese, also poet and editor
P
- Margaret Packham Hargrave (born 1941), A Woman of Air
- Vance and Nettie Palmer, also dramatists and critics
- Ruth Park (born 1923), The Harp in the South
- Pyotr Patrushev (born 1942), Project Nirvana
- Elliot Perlman (born 1964), Three Dollars
- James Phelan (born 1979), Literati, Fox Hunt, Patriot Act, Blood Oil
- Nancy Phelan (1913–2008), also memoirist, 2004 Patrick White Award winner
- D.B.C. Pierre (born 1961), 2003 Booker Prize winner for Vernon God Little
- Doris Pilkington Garimara (born 1937), Follow the Rabbit-Proof Fence
- Dorothy Porter (1954–2008), verse novels, The Monkey's Mask
- Hal Porter (1911–1984), The Tilted Cross, better known for memoir The Watcher on the Cast Iron Balcony
- Rosa Campbell Praed (1851–1935)
- Katharine Susannah Prichard (1883–1969), The Goldfields Trilogy, The Roaring Nineties (1946)
R
- Matthew Reilly (born 1974), action/thriller
- Henry Handel Richardson (aka Ethel Robertson) (1870–1946), The Fortunes of Richard Mahony
- Peter Robb (born 1946), Midnight in Sicily M
- Gregory David Roberts (born 1952), Shantaram
- Deborah Robertson (born 1959), Careless
- Alice Grant Rosman (1882–1961)
- Jennifer Rowe (Emily Rodda) (born 1948), crime fiction and children's fantasy, Deltora Quest
- Tracy Ryan (born 1964), novelist, poet and translator
S
- Madeleine St John (1941–2006), Booker Prize for Fiction shortlisted The Essence of the Thing (1997)
- Eva Sallis (Eva Hornung) (born 1964), Haim (1997), Australian/Vogel Literary Award
- Philip Salom (born 1950), also poet
- G K Saunders (born 1910), The Stranger
- Henry Savery (1791–1842), convicted forger and Australia's first novelist
- Conrad Sayce (1888–1935), outback adventure novels
- Wendy Scarfe (born 1933), novelist, biographer and poet
- Katherine Scholes (born 1959), The Stone Angel
- John A. Scott (born 1948), also poet, Warra Warra, What I Have Written (1994)
- Kim Scott (born 1957), Benang
- Rosie Scott (born 1948)
- Alan Seymour (born 1927), mainly playwright
- Thomas Shapcott (born 1935), poet, novelist and playwright, 2000 Patrick White Award winner
- Charles Herbert Shaw (1900–1955), journalist and detective fiction
- Patricia Shaw (born 1929), River of the Sun (1991) and The Opal Seekers (1996)
- Nevil Shute (1899–1960), A Town Like Alice (1950), On the Beach (1957)
- Craig Silvey (born 1982), Rhubarb (2004), Jasper Jones (2009)
- Helen de Guerry Simpson (1897–1940)
- Lindsay Simpson (born 1957), crime fiction
- Tim Sinclair (born 1972)
- Catherine Helen Spence (1825–1910), Clara Morison: A Tale of South Australia During the Gold Fever (1854)
- Eleanor Spence (1928–2008), young adults author
- Ken Spillman (born 1959)
- Kimberley Starr (born 1970), The Kingdom Where Nobody Dies
- Nicolette Stasko (born 1950), The Invention of Everyday Life (2007)
- Christina Stead (1902–1983), The Man Who Loved Children (1940), For Love Alone (1945), Letty Fox: Her Luck (1946)
- Gordon Neil Stewart (1912–1999), crime fiction
- Dal Stivens (1911–1997), Jimmy Brockett 1981, Patrick White Award winner
- Karen Stollznow (born 1976), God Bless America: Strange and Unusual Religious Beliefs and Practices in the United States (2013); Haunting America (2013); Language Myths, Mysteries and Magic (2014); Hits and Mrs. (2016)
- Louis Stone (1871–1935), Jonah
- Randolph Stow (born 1935), To the Islands (1958) Miles Franklin Award; Patrick White Award (1979); The Merry-Go-Round in the Sea (1965)
- Donald Stuart (1913–1983), Yandy
T
- Peter Temple (born 1946), crime fiction, The Broken Shore (2005), Truth (2009), winner of the Miles Franklin Literary Award (2010)
- Kylie Tennant (1912–1988), The Battlers (1941), Ride on Stranger (1943)
- Colin Thiele (1920–2006), Storm Boy (1964)
- Carrie Tiffany (born 1965), Everyman's Rules for Scientific Living (2005), shortlisted for the Miles Franklin Literary Award and the Orange Prize; Mateship with Birds (2012)
- P. L. Travers (1899–1996), Mary Poppins (1934)
- Rachael Treasure, Jillaroo (2000)
- Penelope Trevor (born 1960), Listening for Small Sounds (1996)
- Christos Tsiolkas (born 1965), Loaded (1995); Dead Europe (2005); The Slap (2008), winner of Best Book Commonwealth Writers Prize 2009, shortlisted for Miles Franklin Literary Award (2009)
- Lee Tulloch Fabulous Nobodies
- Ethel Turner (1872–1958), Seven Little Australians (1894)
- George Turner (1916–1997), The Cupboard Under the Stairs (1962) Miles Franklin Award
U
- Arthur Upfield (1890–1964), crime fiction featuring the part-aboriginal detective 'Boney'; The Sands of Windee (1931)
V
- Lin Van Hek
- Frederick Bert Vickers (born 1903)
- Mary Theresa Vidal (1815–1869)
W
- Brenda Walker (born 1957), The Wing of Night
- Dave Warner (born 1953), crime fiction
- Judah Waten (1912–1985)[19]
- E. L. Grant Watson (1885–1970)
- Sam Watson (born 1952), The Kadaitcha Sung
- Archie Weller (born 1957), The Day of the Dog
- Morris West (1916–1999), The Shoes of the Fisherman
- Herb Wharton (born 1936)
- Nadia Wheatley (born 1949), children's fiction
- Patrick White (1912–1990), winner of Nobel Prize for Literature (1973) for The Eye of the Storm; inaugural winner, Miles Franklin Award 1957, Voss
- Sonny Whitelaw (born 1956), science fiction, Stargate series
- Lili Wilkinson (born 1981)
- Darren Williams (born 1967), Angel Rock, 1994 Australian/Vogel Literary Award winner
- Eric Willmot (born 1936)[20]
- Anne Wilson (1848–1930)
- Ben Winch (born 1973)
- Tara June Winch (1983), Swallow the Air
- Gerard Windsor (born 1944), Heaven Where The Bachelors Sit
- Tim Winton (born 1960), Miles Franklin Award winner 1984 Shallows, 1992 Cloudstreet, 2002 Dirt Music, 2009 Breath
- Amy Witting (1918–2001), I for Isobel, 1993 Patrick White Award winner
- Charlotte Wood (born 1965), The Submerged Cathedral
- Sue Woolfe (born 1950), Leaning Towards Infinity
- Alexis Wright (born 1950), Carpentaria 2007 Miles Franklin Award winner
- Patricia Wrightson (1921–2010), children's author, The Rocks of Honey (1960), An Older Kind of Magic (1972), The Nargun and the Stars (1973)
Y
- Morgan Yasbincek (born 1964)
Z
- Markus Zusak (born 1975), The Book Thief
See also
References
- ↑ "The Pulitzer Prizes — 2006 Winners". The Pulitzer Board. Archived from the original on 20 December 2006. Retrieved 21 December 2006.
- ↑ "JM Coetzee becomes an Australian citizen". Mail & Guardian online. 2006-03-06. Retrieved 2007-08-18.
- ↑ "Crime and the Corris factor". Melbourne: The Age. 30 August 2003.
- ↑ "Devanny, Jean 1894–1962". Dictionary of New Zealand Biography.
- ↑ "Drake-Brockman, Henrietta Frances York (1901–1968)". Australian Women's Archives Project.
- ↑ "Biography: Sarah Dowse". National Library of Australia. Retrieved 2007-10-01.
- ↑ "Margaret Fane". AustLit. Retrieved 10 October 2013.
- ↑ "On the couch with Kerry Greenwood". The Age. Melbourne. 14 August 2003. Retrieved 27 March 2007.
- ↑ "Lawson, William (Will) (1876–1957)". Retrieved 2007-09-25.
- ↑ "LAZAROO, Simone". Archived from the original on 2007-01-05. Retrieved 2007-03-27.
- ↑ James Willow Jr, "The Holy Grail", Cruel World, December 2013 page 132 ISBN 978-0-9941546-2-0
- ↑ Adam Greenberg, "How not to be seen", Cruel World, January 2013 ISBN 978-0-9941546-1-3
- ↑ "Hilary Lofting". AustLit. Retrieved 11 October 2013.
- ↑ "Melissa Lucashenko". Archived from the original on 2007-09-01. Retrieved 2007-03-27.
- ↑ "Boyer Lectures, 4: Up Over". Retrieved 2007-03-29.
Leonard Mann, wounded at Passchendaele in 1917, published a novel about the war in 1932. In Flesh in Armour he describes some infantrymen who squat on the railings in Trafalgar Square and survey the city.
- ↑ "The Retreat of Radiance". University of Sydney. Retrieved 2007-10-01.
- ↑ "Mudrooroo (a.k.a. Mudrooroo, Colin Johnson; Nyoongah, Colin Johnson; Johnson, Colin; Narogin, Mudrooroo; Nyoongah, Mudrooroo )". Retrieved 2007-03-29.
- ↑ "Joanna Murray-Smith". Archived from the original on 2007-03-04. Retrieved 2007-03-29.
- ↑ "Waten, Judah". AustLit Database. Retrieved 2007-05-14.
- ↑ "Willmot, Eric". AustLit Database. Retrieved 2007-05-14.
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