PLA Dinner
Once again tonight writers, translators,
illustrators, publishers, agents and fans put on their glad rags and turned up
for a glittering evening in the Art Gallery. The occasion was the annual NSW
Premier's Literary Awards dinner. This year's dinner cost $15 more than last
year's. (My friend, former colleague and fellow-blogger J Ridge wasn't there,
but thanks to the joys of Twitter she had blogged about the dinner before I got home. I've
got more detail.) In previous years
the dinner has been organised by staff of the Ministry of Arts. This year it was
in the hands of the Department of Arts, Sport and Recreation. The transition was
seamless, though there was a slightly awkward moment when the Department's
Director General, who was our MC, said we were doing very well for an arts event
and only running half an hour late. There was no hiss of indrawn breath, but I
did think it indicated she was much more familiar with sporting events than with
arty ones, where my experience has been there is an obsession with punctuality.
And at times, as she urged us to resume our seats after a break, her tone was
reminiscent of what one would hear over the loudspeaker at, say, a Netball
tournament. But these were amusing foibles that in no way took away from the
pleasure of the evening.Nathan Rees,
more famous for his stint as a garbo and for having inherited a train wreck of a
government than for his Eng Lit Hons degree and likeability, gave the impression
that this was the kind of thing he would much rather be presiding at than the
bear pit of politics. In his welcome (which followed Aunty Sylvia welcome to
country, in which she said, 'Your books let me travel'), he spoke of his own
passion for books, including some that left him cold, surely a mark of a genuine
book lover. And he said, interestingly, 'The examined life is only ever the turn
of a page away.' This was the
thirtieth year of the awards, and there was slightly more reminiscence than
usual. Neville Wran, the first Premier of the Literary Awards, was there and
gave a brief talk on their genesis. SUccess has many parents, he reminded us,
but failure is always an orphan. Of the many people who have claimed m/paternity
of these awards, he assured us in his ruined voice, the one who could truly
claim parenthood was his wife Jill, who insisted that Sydney should have a
writers' festival distinguished by literary awards. He mentioned the legendary
Night of the Bread Rolls in 1985 when the guest speaker Morris West was pelted
with bakery products. I'd heard that it was because he droned. One of my dinner
companions was there on that night, and he assured us that it was because the
literary types were envious of Morris West's best-seller
status.Marieke Hardy, of Reasons You Will
Hate Me, gave the Address, with a tattoo on each shoulder and a large
red flower behind one ear. She spoke of Twitter and quoted Stephen Fry to good
effect. I the past, I've referred to these dinners as the Oscars of the
introverted. Marieke went several steps better and, referring to booklovers out
and proud, called it 'our Mardi
Gras'.As in past years, it's my
pleasure to list the winners with random
observations:The UTS Prize for new
writing: Nam Le - The BoatThere's
no short list for this prize, so the announcement was a bit of a surprise. It's
a wonderful book. The award was accepted by Nam Le's publisher, who read out a
short speech Nam had sent him from
Italy.The Gleebooks Prize for an
outstanding book of critical writing: David Love - Unfinished Business: Paul
Keating's interrupted
revolutionNathan 's script described
this as an accessible account of important economic matters. I'm afraid I didn't
understand a word of the brief acceptance speech after the initial , 'This is
one for the true believers!'The
Community Relations Commission Award : Eric Richards - Destination Australia:
migration to Australia since
1901Eric Richards spoke of how
Australia's immigration program has been an outstanding success, yet has been
and is still a cause of widespread anxiety. He was expecting the book to provoke
'historical warfare', but so far there has been
none.The Translation Prize and PEN
Trophy: David ColmerHe seems to
be a nice man -- he translates from
Dutch.The Play Award:
Daniel Keene - The Serpent's
TeethI saw the STC production of
these plays, and was less than impressed by the production, though the plays as
written seemed to be marvellous. I
approve.The Script Writing
Award: Louis Nowra and Rachel Perkins and Beck Cole - First
AustraliansIn announcing this prize
the Premier said, quite rightly, that it was hard to go past this show, but then
he went and spoiled the moment by feminising Mr Nowra's first name. When Rachel
Perkins took the mike she pointed out the error. Our Nathan looked suitably
abashed, and Louis clearly couldn't help himself: 'How long do you plan to stay
in government?' he asked, trying to make it sound good-natured. Ow!
The Kenneth Slessor Prize for a
book of poems or for a single poem of substantial length published in book
form: LK Holt - Man Wolf
ManPossibly intimidated by the
compere's reminders of the importance of being brief, LK Holt simply thanked her
publisher and took her prize. She did stand at teh microphone long enough to
enable those of us close enough to read the enigmatic tattoo on her left
shoulder: 'MCMLXN'.The Ethel Turner
Prize for a work written for young people of secondary school level: Michelle
Cooper - A Brief History of
MontmarayAt this stage I began to
feel very under-read. The Patricia
Wrightson Prize for a work for children up to secondary school level: Ursula
Dubosarsky & Tohby Riddle - The Word
SpyAnd then I started to feel like
an insider again. Tohby and Ursula have both worked at The School Magazine.
I read this book in its first incarnations as a series of columns in the
magazine, and I was sitting at the same table as both of them -- along with two
other generations of Ursula's family and Tohby's wife Sally. This is the
fifth gong Ursula has collected from NSW Premiers! Though, it's no longer
a gong. To mark the 30th anniversary, a new trophy has been created, by Dinosaur
Designs: a hefty, transparent, book-shaped
objet.The Douglas Stewart
Prize for a prose work other than a work of fiction: Chloe Hooper - The Tall
Man: Death and Life on Palm
IslandI've read this too, and think
it deserves any prize anyone want to give
it.The Christina Stead Prize for a
book of fiction: Joan London - The Good
ParentsI haven't read this, but it's
been very well reviewed in my house. Joan London gave a sweet speech,
acknowledging , among other things, her debt to her
children.The People's Choice
Award: Steve Toltz - A Fraction of the
WholeI hadn't voted, because I'd
only read two of the books, and this wasn't one of the ones I'd read. The same
man who had accepted Nam Le's award accepted this one, but Steve Toltz, who
couldn't be there, hadn't tweeted him anything to say, so he just looked
pleased.Book of the Year: Nam Le
- The BoatThen the poor guy had to
get up for the third time, and gave us the second half of Nam Le's emailed
acceptance speech, in which he thanked his readers, 'both professional and
normal'. As one who used to be a professional read who is striving to attain
normality, I loved this.The
Special Award: Katharine
BrisbaneKatharine was my first
employer, when he was Managing Editor at Currency
Press, and I couldn't be more pleased at her receiving this
recognition. She adlibbed an elegant speech about the importance of recognising
achievement in the arts. She has received a number of awards in her time, she
said, but this is the first one to come with money attached. She closed by
saying that she too had been there in 1985. 'We pelted Morris West with bread
rolls because he warned us that we had to be prepared for bad things. The Baader
Meinhofs were in the news, and he was warning us against terrorism. We thought
he was ridiculous, but he was
right.'And then it was all over bar
the networking ...... and the journey
home. As I was walking back towards the city from the Art Gallery, I drew
alongside a rough looking man going in the same direction. He said hello and
asked how the evening had gone. 'We're homeless, you see, we sleep just beside
the porch there.' We chatted for a couple of minutes. He told me who had won the
People's Choice at the Archibald. I tired to ell him about the Literary Awards,
but I think he still thought I'd been at something to do with paintings. As we
parted, he said, in an eerie echo of Nathan Rees's comment about the examined
life: 'People don't realise it, but you're always just one step away from the
gutter,' and we wished each other good night and good luck.
Posted: Mon - May 18, 2009 at 08:56 PM
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This started out as a patchy journal about family life with my mother-in-law, Mollie, who has Alzheimers and was then living with us. Mollie has moved, first into a "low-care facility" then, in July 2004, into a nursing home. As these and other events have overtaken us, the blog has moved on ...
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Published On: May 19, 2009 10:05 PM
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