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Announcing the winners of the inaugural GRIFFITH REVIEW EMERGING WRITERS’ PRIZE

Griffith REVIEW has always been committed to providing opportunities for new and emerging writers.

We have now formalised this with the inaugural GREW prize, supported by Text Publishing and Varuna Writers' House.

The prize includes a week's residency at Varuna, manuscript appraisal and mentoring.

FICTION: Georgina Luck for 'Paul's first day' from Edition 26: Stories for Today

NON-FICTION: Mark Welker for 'Greyfields: Notes on the death of a shopping centre' from Edition 25: After the Crisis


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Writers include:
Frank Moorhouse
Murray Sayle
Robyn Williams
Ian Lowe
Jeff McMullen
Chris Sarra

Truth - Peter Temple

 

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Edition 26: Stories for Today

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A new world is taking shape, driven by globalisation and the increasing complexity of our era. We are at a point in history where the artists and story tellers are best placed to define us to ourselves.

Stories for Today, a special summer fiction edition, presents a fresh and candid reinterpretation of the Australian character, with stories from the writers who are making an impact at home and overseas.

Voices from home and the Australian diaspora explore the impact of migration, easy movement, pandemics, recession, connection with Asia, the service economy and more.

Just as fiction provided the enduring images and notions of Australia at other key points in our history so we need stories to do this today. Articulating the new values – sustainability, tolerance and accountability – shouldn't be left to the politicians and advertisers but is something artists and writers are equipped to explore and express.

This edition will also feature a series of short essays commissioned from leading writers who will engage with questions about why writing fiction matters, how it differs from other forms of communication and what it contributes to our culture and understanding of ourselves.

>> Read more

 

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The writer in a time of change by Kate Grenville

"A while ago I went to a lecture on geothermal power. Afterwards I got talking to the man sitting next to me, a retired professor of physics.

When I told him I was a writer, his face lit up. A writer?
Ah, you're the people the planet needs! You must get the message out - it's simple, just four words - coal is too
cheap! Get that into every newspaper and magazine!

Oh, well, I mumbled, I'm not that sort of writer. He peered
at me. Uh, actually, I blurted out, I'm a fiction writer. His
face fell. Fiction? You mean you write...novels?”

 

 
Melissa Lucashenko

The silent majority
Melissa Lucashenko

Alan Attwood

Fact and fiction
Alan Attwood

Carmel Bird
   

online2_clear.gifWriting from the past
by Geraldine Brooks

Learning to write
by Catherine Cole

After the afterword
by
Nikki Gemmell

On the same page, right?
by
Melissa Lucashenko

   

About Griffith REVIEW

Griffith REVIEW celebrates good writing and promotes public debate.

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Next Edition

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We are what we eat – and
in an era of climate change, food is the canary in the mine. Prices are rising, droughts and storms are affecting farmers, and the global model of food production is under challenge. Food Chain explores our complex relationship with the food
we eat.

>> More on Edition 27

From the Archives

Global warming

Photos © Jocelyn Carlin

Climate change?
Global warming?
Just hot air?

In his article, We are all Tuvaluans from Edition 12: Hot Air, Brisbane-based journalist and journalism educator, Dr Mark Hayes reports on the planning being undertaken by the people of Tuvalu as the seas rise.

... More on Edition 12: Hot Air

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To Paradise and beyond

In Edition 20: Cities on the Edge, Peter Meredith reported on the practical dilemmas of providing enough water for Queensland's growing population.

In view of the recent
decision by federal Environment Minister Peter Garrett to reject the proposed Traveston Crossing Dam, it's a great time to read this informative piece
of reportage:
To Paradise and beyond
.

Photo © Arkin Mackay