2025 Prime Minister’s Literary Awards shortlist announced

Find out the shortlistees across six categories in this year's Prime Minister's Literary Awards.
A young woman lying on a blanket outside reading a book. Prime Minister’s Literary Awards.

The shortlist for the 2025 Prime Minister’s Literary Awards has just been announced. The richest literary prize in the nation celebrates the exceptional talents of emerging and established Australian writers, illustrators, poets and historians.  

This marks the third year Creative Australia has delivered the awards, following the release of the Australian Government’s 2023 National Cultural Policy, Revive: a place for every story, a story for every place.  

645 entries were received across six literary categories: fiction, non-fiction, young adult literature, children’s literature, poetry and Australian history.  

The shortlists across these categories include:

2025 Prime Minister’s Literary Awards shortlist: quick links

Fiction: Prime Minister’s Literary Awards

  • Always Will Be: Stories of Goori sovereignty from the futures of the Tweed
    by Mykaela Saunders (University of Queensland Press)
  • Highway 13 by Fiona McFarlane (Allen & Unwin)
  • Juice by Tim Winton (Penguin Random House)
  • Rapture by Emily Maguire (Allen & Unwin)
  • Theory & Practice by Michelle de Kretser (Text Publishing)
Rapture, by Emily Maguire. Image: Allen & Unwin. Prime Minister’s Literary Awards.
Rapture, by Emily Maguire. Image: Allen & Unwin. Prime Minister’s Literary Awards.

Non-Fiction: Prime Minister’s Literary Awards

  • Cactus Pear for My Beloved by Samah Sabawi (Penguin Random House Australia)
  • Deep Water by James Bradley (Penguin Random House)
  • Fragile Creatures: A Memoir by Khin Myint (Black Inc.)
  • Mean Streak by Rick Morton (HarperCollins Publishers)
  • The Pulling by Adele Dumont (Scribe Publications) 

Australian History: Prime Minister’s Literary Awards 

  • Australia in 100 Words by Amanda Laugesen (NewSouth Publishing)
  • Critical Care: Nurses on the frontline of Australia’s AIDS crisis by Geraldine Fela (NewSouth Publishing)
  • Näku Dhäruk The Bark Petitions by Clare Wright (Text Publishing)
  • The Wild Reciter: Poetry and Popular Culture in Australia 1890-the Present by Peter Kirkpatrick (Melbourne University Publishing)
  • Warra Warra Wai by Darren Rix and Craig Cormick (Scribner Australia, an imprint of Simon & Schuster Australia)

Poetry: Prime Minister’s Literary Awards

  • Companions, Ancestors, Inscriptions by Peter Boyle (Vagabond Press)
  • Makarra by Barrina South (Recent Work Press)
  • rock flight by Hasib Hourani (Giramondo Publishing)
  • That Galloping Horse by Petra White (Shearsman Books)
  • The Other Side of Daylight: New and Selected Poems by David Brooks (University of Queensland Press)

Children’s Literature: Prime Minister’s Literary Awards

  • Leaf Called Greaf by Kelly Canby (Fremantle Press)
  • Everything You Ever Wanted to Know About the Tooth Fairy (And Some Things You Didn’t) by Briony Stewart (Hachette Australia)
  • Leo and Ralph by Peter Carnavas (University of Queensland Press)
  • Raymaŋgirrbuy dhäwu When I was a little girl by Kylie Gatjawarrawuy Mununggurr (Magabala Books)
  • We Live in a Bus by Dave Petzold (Thames & Hudson Australia

Young Adult: Prime Minister’s Literary Awards

  • Anomaly by Emma Lord (Affirm Press, an imprint of Simon & Schuster Australia)
  • My Family and Other Suspects by Kate Emery (Allen & Unwin)
  • The Anti-Racism Kit by Sabina Patawaran and Jinyoung Kim (Hardie Grant Children’s Publishing)
  • The Invocations by Krystal Sutherland (Penguin Random House Australia)
  • Thunderhead by Sophie Beer (Allen & Unwin)

Newly appointed Director, Writing Australia Wenona Byrne said: 

‘These awards celebrate the highest expression of literary excellence and we warmly congratulate the shortlisted authors and illustrators on this recognition of their outstanding work.

Read: Best new books published August 2025 in Australia

This year marks the first delivery of the Prime Minister’s Literary Awards under Writing Australia. The Awards are a key part of our commitment to supporting the literature sector and we are proud to celebrate these works as part of a new era in Australian writing.’

The winners of the 2025 Prime Minister’s Literary Awards will be announced on Monday 29 September at a ceremony held at the National Library of Australia in Canberra. Both the winners and the shortlisted authors will share in a tax-free prize pool of $600,000. Each shortlisted entry will receive $5,000, with the winner of each category receiving $80,000.

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Thuy On is the Reviews and Literary Editor of ArtsHub and an arts journalist, critic and poet who’s written for a range of publications including The Guardian, The Saturday Paper, Sydney Review of Books, The Australian, The Age/SMH and Australian Book Review. She was the Books Editor of The Big Issue for 8 years and a former Melbourne theatre critic correspondent for The Australian. She has three collections of poetry published by the University of Western Australian Press (UWAP): Turbulence (2020), Decadence (2022) and Essence (2025). Threads: @thuy_on123 Instagram: poemsbythuy