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Tim WintonTim Winton
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Bibliography |
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BiographyTim Winton began his first novel, An Open Swimmer (1982), at the age of 19, while on a Creative Writing course at Curtin University, Perth. It won the Australian/Vogel National Literary Award, and he has since made his living as a full-time writer.
His books include Dirt Music (2001), winner of several awards and shortlisted for the 2002 Man Booker Prize for Fiction, and The Turning (2005), which tells 17 overlapping stories. His most recent novel is Breath (2008), winner of the 2009 Miles Franklin Award.
   
  Genres (in alphabetical order)Children, Fiction, Non-fiction, Short stories, Travel     BibliographyAn Open Swimmer Allen & Unwin (Australia), 1982 Minimum of Two McPhee Gribble (Australia), 1985 Shallows Weidenfeld & Nicolson, 1986 That Eye, the Sky Weidenfeld & Nicolson, 1986 Scission and Other Stories Weidenfeld & Nicolson, 1987 In the Winter Dark Weidenfeld & Nicolson, 1988 Jesse McPhee Gribble (Australia), 1988 Cloudstreet Picador, 1991 The Bugalugs Bum Thief McPhee Gribble (Australia), 1991 Lockie Leonard, Human Torpedo Red Fox, 1992 Blood and Water: Stories Picador, 1993 Land's Edge Macmillan (Australia), 1993 Local Colour (photography and text by Bill Bachman; additional text by Tim Winton) (Hong Kong) Odyssey, 1994 Lockie Leonard, Scumbuster Macmillan Children's, 1995 The Collected Shorter Novels of Tim Winton Picador, 1995 The Riders Picador, 1995 Blueback Picador, 1998 Lockie Leonard, Legend Macmillan Children's, 1998 The Deep Sandcastle Books (Australia), 1998 Down to Earth (with photography by Richard Woldendorp) Freemantle Arts Centre Press (Australia), 1999 Dirt Music Picador, 2001 The Turning Picador, 2005 Small Mercies (novella) Picador, 2006 Breath Picador, 2008  
  Prizes and awards1981 Australian Vogel National Literary Award An Open Swimmer 1984 Miles Franklin Award (Australia) Shallows 1985 Western Australian Council Literary Award Scission 1990 Western Australian Premier's Award for Children's Fiction Lockie Leonard, Human Torpedo 1991 Miles Franklin Award (Australia) Cloudstreet 1991 NBC Banjo Award for Fiction (Australia) Cloudstreet 1991 West Australian Fiction Award Cloudstreet 1992 Deo Gloria Award Cloudstreet 1993 American Library Association Best Book for Young Adults Award Lockie Leonard, Human Torpedo 1993 Wilderness Society Environment Award (Australia) Lockie Leonard, Scumbuster 1994 Australian Book of the Year (shortlist) The Riders 1995 Booker Prize for Fiction (shortlist) The Riders 1995 Commonwealth Writers Prize (South East Asia and South Pacific Region, Best Book) The Riders 1998 Bolinda Audio Book Awards (Australia) Blueback 1998 Family Award for Children's Literature (Australia) Lockie Leonard, Legend 1998 Wilderness Society Environment Award (Australia) Blueback 1999 WAYRBA Hoffman Award for Young Readers (Australia) Blueback 2001 Western Australian Premier's Book Award Premier's Prize Dirt Music 2002 Australian Booksellers Association Book of the Year Award Dirt Music 2002 Man Booker Prize for Fiction (shortlist) Dirt Music 2002 Miles Franklin Award (Australia) Dirt Music 2002 New South Wales Premier's Literary Award Dirt Music 2003 Australian Society of Authors Medal 2005 Christina Stead Prize for Fiction (Australia) The Turning 2005 Colin Roderick Award (Australia) The Turning 2005 Commonwealth Writers Prize (South East Asia and South Pacific Region, Best Book) (shortlist) The Turning 2005 Queensland Fiction Prize (Australia) The Turning 2009 Commonwealth Writers Prize (South East Asia and South Pacific Region, Best Book) (shortlist) Breath 2009 Miles Franklin Award (Australia) Breath    
  Critical Perspective'In Australia you looked at and saw the possible, the spaces, the maybes. Here the wildness /was pressed into something else ... ' observes Aussie exile Fred Scully in The Riders (1995), constantly negotiating in his mind with the landscapes of home, and about to depart Ireland with his small daughter on a nightmarish journey around Europe. These are characteristic notes in the novels and stories of Tim Winton, who is one of Australia's best-known writers internationally, both The Riders and Dirt Music (2001) having been short-listed for the Booker Prize for Fiction. His books are boisterous and lyrical by turns, warm-hearted in their depictions of family life but with characters that often have to be in extremis in order to find themselves. They have a wonderful feeling for the strange beauty of Australia; are frequently flavoured with Aussie vernacular expressions, and a good deal of emotional directness. They question macho role models (his books are full of strong women and troubled men) and are prepared to risk their realist credibility with enigmatic, even visionary endings.
The lead female character in Dirt Music is Georgie Jutland, a 40-year-old ex-nurse and stepmother of two children, living a prosperous if unsatisfied life in the coast town of White Point in Western Australia. She stirs the plot by betraying her dull husband, a local lobster fisherman, becoming involved with Lu Fox, a troubled younger man who is also a poacher. He is another piece of damaged maleness, oppressed by his past: 'the way he lives is a project of forgetting'. Like Scully, he goes travelling, firstly searching out the asbestos mining town that killed his father. Its surrounding landscape is strangely beautiful: 'this is the Pilbara. Everything looks big and Technicolor. Ahead the stupendous iron ranges. There are trees again. This land looks dreamt, willed, potent'. Again, those he meets along the way are 'Lost people'; some drifters, some experiencing intense pain. He learns to survive alone on a remote island, playing games with sharks and admiring 'the carnal sociability of the buggers'. Georgie and her reconciled husband fly to the area to search for him. Fox is yet another Winton character to be beset by dreams, flashbacks and memory; their journeys of self-discovery are connected to their relationship with the natural world. Tim Winton brings his human and environmental themes together in ways that are always intensely realized and touching.
Dr Jules Smith, 2003  
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