1954 in Australian literature
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
This article presents a list of the historical events and publications of Australian literature during 1954.
- Charlotte Jay (pseudonym of Geraldine Halls) won the inaugural Edgar Allan Poe Award for Best Novel for Beat Not the Bones[1]
Books
- James Aldridge – Heroes of the Empty View[2]
- Jon Cleary – The Climate of Courage
- Miles Franklin – Cockatoos : A Story of Youth and Exodists
- Catherine Gaskin – Sara Dane
- T. A. G. Hungerford – Sowers of the Wind : A Novel of the Occupation of Japan[3]
- Eric Lambert
- Eve Langley – White Topee
- J. E. Macdonnell
- Kenneth Mackenzie – The Refuge
- Alan Moorehead – A Summer Night[6]
- E. V. Timms – The Fury
- Judah Waten – The Unbending[7]
Crime and mystery
Short stories
- A. Bertram Chandler – "Shadow Before"[10]
- David Martin – "Where a Man Belongs"[11]
- John Morrison – "The Incense-Burner"[12]
- Dal Stivens – "In the Depths"[13]
- Judah Waten – "Well, What do You Say to My Boy?"[14]
Children's and Young Adult fiction
- Nan Chauncy – A Fortune for the Brave[15]
- Joan Phipson – Six and Silver[16]
- Norman B. Tindale & Harold Arthur Lindsay – The First Walkabout, illustrated by Madeleine Boyce
Poetry
- Thea Astley – "Droving Man"[17]
- Dorothy Auchterlonie – "The Tree"[18]
- John Blight
- "The Anchor"[19]
- "Death of a Whale"
- "Nor'-Easter"[20]
- "Rope"[21]
- The Two Suns Met : Poems[22]
- R. D. Fitzgerald
- Mary Gilmore – Fourteen Men : Verses
- A. D. Hope – "The Return of Persephone"[25]
- Christopher Koch – "The Boy Who Dreamed the Country Night"[26]
- James McAuley
- Kenneth Mackenzie – "An Old Inmate"[30]
- David Rowbotham – "Mullabinda"[31]
- Douglas Stewart – "Spider-Gums"[32]
- Colin Thiele – "The Mushroomer"[33]
- John Thompson – Thirty Poems[34]
- Judith Wright
- "At Cooloolah"
- "Flying Fox on Barbed Wire"[35]
- "The Two Fires"
Drama
Theatre
Biography
- Nevil Shute – Slide Rule : The Autobiography of an Engineer[36]
- David Unaipon – My Life Story[37]
Non-Fiction
- Vance Palmer – The Legend of the Nineties[38]
Awards and honours
Literary
| Award | Author | Title | Publisher |
|---|---|---|---|
| ALS Gold Medal[39] | Mary Gilmore | Fourteen Men : Verses | Angus and Robertson |
Children's and Young Adult
| Award | Category | Author | Title | Publisher |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Children's Book of the Year Award[40] | Older Readers | K. Langloh Parker, edited by Henrietta Drake-Brockman, illustrated by Elizabeth Durack |
Australian Legendary Tales | Angus and Robertson |
Poetry
| Award | Author | Title | Publisher |
|---|---|---|---|
| Grace Leven Prize for Poetry[41] | John Thompson | Thirty Poems | Edwards and Shaw |
Births
A list, ordered by date of birth (and, if the date is either unspecified or repeated, ordered alphabetically by surname) of births in 1954 of Australian literary figures, authors of written works or literature-related individuals follows, including year of death.
- 12 January
- Brian Caswell, writer for children[42]
- Lee Tulloch, novelist[43]
- 26 March – Dorothy Porter, poet (died 2008)[44]
- 21 May – Paul Collins, author and editor[45]
- 17 June – Kerry Greenwood, novelist (died 2025)[46]
- 5 July – Kevin Hart, poet[47]
- 20 September – James Moloney, writer for children[48]
- 1 November – Andrew Lansdown, poet[49]
- 16 November – Anne Morgan, writer of children's books[50]
Unknown date
- Russell Blackford, novelist and critic[51]
- Rory Harris, poet[52]
- Shane McCauley, poet[53]
- Rosemary Sorensen, journalist, editor and critic[54]