Five Islands Prize
kevinjb@unimelb.edu.au
Five Islands Prize
PO Box 68
Brunswick Victoria 3056
We are proud to be providing a significant annual prize that supports emerging poets and honours the publishers who have shown confidence in new poets.
Unique among literary awards, this prize for a first book of poetry includes a cash prize for the publisher as well as the chosen poet.
As many readers and poets know, Five Islands Press was a prominent independent Australian poetry publishing house for thirty-four years, from 1986 until 2007 under the direction of Ron Pretty, then until 2020 under a changing team of editors who kept the press going strongly.
Ron pretty's legacy continues to build through several projects. The most recent incarnation of 5 Islands Press, initiated and administered by Mark Tredinnick and Steve Meyrick publishes the work of new, emerging and established Australian poets. Although the publishing press and the prize share a name, there is no financial, legal, administrative or institutional connection between 5 Islands Press and the Five Islands Poetry Prize. What we do share is a commitment to honouring the memory of a teacher and poet who contributed so much to the cause of Australian poetry. Learn more about 5 Islands Press by visiting their website
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Emeritus Professor Kevin Brophy AM
Administrator for the Five Islands Prize
The 2021-22 Five Islands Prize was awarded to Emilie Collyer and Vagabond Press for Do You Have Anything Less Domestic?
The 2022-23 Five Islands Prize was awarded to Dan Hogan and Cordite Books for Secret Third Thing.
Highly Commended:
Commended:
Post four copies of the submitted poetry book to the address below. Please note, posted books should be received on or before 15 July 2024.
Five Islands Poetry Prize
PO Box 68
Brunswick Victoria 3056
Email Kevin Brophy, attesting that this is the poet’s first published book of poetry, and provide contact details for the poet and the publisher. Please subject your email as "Five Islands Prize Entry".
Amanda Anastasi is the convener of La Mama Poetica and author of The Inheritors (Black Pepper, 2021). Her work has been featured in Australian Poetry Journal, Griffith Review, Cordite, The Massachusetts Review and Best Australian Science Writing 2021 and 2022. Amanda is a two-time recipient of the Ada Cambridge Poetry Prize and was awarded a Wheeler Centre Hot Desk Fellowship to write a series of poems set in the year 2042.
In 2020, she was a digital Artist in Residence with Assembly of the Future’s The Things We Did Next, exploring imagined futures through poetry. Amanda was Poet in Residence at the Monash Climate Change Communication Research Hub (Monash CliComm) from 2019-2022 and also received a Nielma Sidney Literary Travel Grant to write at the Great Barrier Reef. She will be releasing a new book of poems in 2024 through Recent Work Press.
Emilie Collyer lives on unceded Wurundjeri land. Her writing is widely published in Australia and internationally. Her poetry collection Do you have anything less domestic? (Vagabond Press 2022) won the inaugural Five Islands Poetry Prize and she came runner-up in the 2024 Gwen Harwood Poetry Prize.
Emilie’s plays, including Dream Home, Contest and the multi-internationally produced The Good Girl, have won and been nominated for multiple awards. Emilie is currently under commission with Red Stitch Actors Theatre (Melbourne) and The Street Theatre (Canberra). She has just completed a PhD at RMIT researching feminist creative practice.
Andy Jackson is a poet, creative writing teacher at the University of Melbourne, and a Patron of Writers Victoria. He was the inaugural Writing the Future of Health Fellow, has co-edited disability-themed issues of Southerly and Australian Poetry Journal, and is on the editorial team for disability poetry journal Sunder.
He has featured at literary events and arts festivals across Australia, and on ABC's Radio National and the 7.30 Report. Andy's latest poetry collection is Human Looking, which won the ALS Gold Medal and the Prime Minister's Literary Award for Poetry. He lives and works on Dja Dja Wurrung country.
Professor Dan Disney
Sogang University, Seoul, South Korea
Dr Jennifer Harrison
Dax Poetry Collection Manager and Psychiatry Fellow, University of Melbourne
Dr Nadia Niaz
Founder and Editor Australian Multilingual Writing Project and Creative Writing Program, School of Culture and Communication, The University of Melbourne
Distinguished Professor Jen Webb
Professor of Creative Practice, and Dean of Graduate Research, º¬Ðß²ÝÊÓƵ
Emeritus Professor Kevin Brophy AM
Katie Hayne
º¬Ðß²ÝÊÓƵ
Libby Austen
Technology, Design and Admin Assistant
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Website host and administration support
Australian Poetry
Communications partner
3CR Community Radio
Spoken Word Program
Five Islands Prize
kevinjb@unimelb.edu.au
Five Islands Prize
PO Box 68
Brunswick Victoria 3056