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Wednesday, November 15, 2017

Book review: Tim Winton's compelling midlife memoir | Post ...
src: cdn4.i-scmp.com

Tim (Timothy John) Winton (born 4 August 1960) is a multi-award-winning Australian writer of novels, children's books, non-fiction books and short stories.


Video Tim Winton



Life

Tim Winton was born in Karrinyup, Western Australia, but moved at age of 12 to the regional city of Albany.

Winton has been named a Living Treasure by the National Trust and awarded the Centenary Medal for service to literature and the community. He is patron of the Tim Winton Award for Young Writers sponsored by the City of Subiaco, Western Australia.

He has lived in Italy, France, Ireland and Greece but currently lives in Western Australia. Winton met his wife Denise when they were children at school. When he was 18 and recovering from a car accident they reconnected as she was a student nurse. They married when he was 21 and she was 20 and have three children. They live on the coast north of Perth.

His younger brother, Andrew Winton, is a musician and a high school chaplain. His younger sister is Sharyn O'Neill, who, in 2007, assumed the position of Director General of the WA Education Department.

As his fame has increased Winton has guarded his and his family's privacy. He rarely speaks in public yet he is known as "an affable, plain-speaking man of unaffected intelligence and deep emotions."


Maps Tim Winton



Literary career

Whilst at Curtin University of Technology, Winton wrote his first novel, An Open Swimmer, which won The Australian/Vogel Literary Award in 1981, launching his writing career. He has stated that he wrote "the best part of three books while at university". His second book, Shallows, won the Miles Franklin Award in 1984. It wasn't until Cloudstreet was published in 1991, however, that his writing career was properly established. He has continued to publish fiction, plays and non-fiction material.

The National Library of Australia holds the Papers of Tim Winton (unpublished 1980-1996), biographical cuttings and programs and related material collected by the National Library of Australia.


Tim Winton: “Behind every shrine is a violent, tragic event”
src: www.limelightmagazine.com.au


Acclaim

In 1995, Winton's The Riders was shortlisted for the Man Booker Prize for Fiction, as later was his 2002 book, Dirt Music. Both are currently being adapted for film. He has won many other prizes, including the Miles Franklin Award a record four times: for Shallows (1984), Cloudstreet (1992), Dirt Music (2002) and Breath (2009). Cloudstreet is arguably his best-known work, regularly appearing in lists of Australia's best-loved novels.

He is now one of Australia's most esteemed novelists, writing for both adults and children. All his books are still in print and have been published in eighteen different languages. His work has also been successfully adapted for stage, screen and radio. On the publication of his novel, Dirt Music, he collaborated with broadcaster, Lucky Oceans, to produce a compilation CD, Dirt Music - Music for a Novel.

Young writers award

The Tim Winton Young Writers Award, sponsored annually by the City of Subiaco, offers children across the Perth metropolitan area the opportunity to develop their writing skills. It is open to primary school and secondary school-aged short story writers. Three compilations have been published, Destination Unknown (2001) and Life Bytes (2002). and Hatched: Celebrating twenty years of the Tim Winton Award for Young Writers (2013) features the overall winning story from each year of the award from 1993 to 2012. Winton is the patron of the competition.


We deserve better than this fudging and scheming, and so do our ...
src: static1.squarespace.com


Style and themes

Winton draws his prime inspiration from landscape and place, mostly coastal Western Australia. He has said "The place comes first. If the place isn't interesting to me then I can't feel it. I can't feel any people in it. I can't feel what the people are on about or likely to get up to." His themes often centre on an issue which is described by the character Gail in The Turning when she says that "every vivid experience comes from your adolescence".

"Winton is widely recognised for his depiction of Australians and the land where they live. A keen environmentalist, Winton's love of this land is reflected in the way he uses landscapes and places for inspiration. Many of his stories are set in Western Australia."

Dr Jules Smith for the British Council wrote about Winton, "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."

Winton revisits place and, occasionally, characters from one book to another. Queenie Cookson, for example, is a character in Breath who also appears in Shallows, Minimum of Two and in two of the Lockie Leonard books.


New Tim Winton book The Shepherd's Hut acquired by Pica
src: panmacmillan.azureedge.net


Winton on writing

"I never had a desire for a public life, never expected to be read by more than a couple of thousand people, and when you get the mass audience I seem to have stumbled upon, the public exposure is very disconcerting ... There's an uneasy encounter between art and commerce which I don't know personally how to resolve ... writing is ... something I do for myself and because I can ... magic moments "when it's happening, when you finally get pen to paper, you exist only in that present tense - you don't have an age, a heartbeat, you're just in this squeezed-down narrow focus which is timeless."


New Tim Winton book The Shepherd's Hut acquired by Pica
src: panmacmillan.azureedge.net


Environmental advocacy

Winton is actively involved in the Australian environmental movement. He is a patron of the Australian Marine Conservation Society (AMCS) and is passionately involved in many of their campaigns, notably their work in raising awareness about sustainable seafood consumption. He is a patron of the Stop the Toad Foundation and contributed to the whaling debate with an article on the Last Whale website. He is also a prominent advocate of the Save Moreton Bay organisation, the Environment Defender's Office, the Australian Wildlife Conservancy and the Marine Conservation Society, with which he is campaigning against shark finning.

In 2003, Winton was awarded the inaugural Australian Society of Authors (ASA) Medal in recognition for his work in the campaign to save the Ningaloo Reef.

Winton keeps away from the public eye, unless promoting a new book or supporting an environmental issue. He told reviewer Jason Steger "Occasionally they wheel me out for green advocacy stuff but that's the only kind of stuff I put my head up for."

In 2016, Winton had a species of fish from the Kimberley region named after him.

In March 2017 Tim Winton was named Patron of the newly established Native Australian Animals Trust. The environment and the Australian landscape have always featured strongly in Wintons writings. The trust was established to help research and teaching about native animals and their environment. Associate Professor Tim Dempster, School of Biosciences is quoted as saying, "Australia has a unique and charismatic animal fauna, but our state of knowledge about it is poor. Indeed species can go extinct before we even know of their existence. We have much to learn from our fauna, and a pressing need to do so."


Tim Winton Speaks Out Against Fracking on Vimeo
src: i.vimeocdn.com


Bibliography

Novels

  • An Open Swimmer (1982)
  • Shallows (1984)
  • That Eye, The Sky (1986)
  • In the Winter Dark (1988)
  • Cloudstreet (1991)
  • The Riders (1994)
  • Blueback (1997)
  • Dirt Music (2001)
  • Breath (2008)
  • Lockie Leonard (1990-1997)
  • Eyrie (2013)

Short story collections

  • Scission (1985)
  • Minimum Of Two (1987)
  • A Blow, A Kiss (1985)
  • The Collected Shorter Novels of Tim Winton (1995)
  • The Turning (2005)

Novella

  • Small Mercies (2006)

Plays

  • Rising Water (2011)
  • Signs of Life (2012)
  • Shrine (2013)

In collections of short stories and essays

Winton's short stories have been published in numerous publications and widely anthologised:

  • "Big World", Journeys: Modern Australian Short Stories, Barry Oakley (ed), Five Mile Press, 2007
  • "Abbreviation"/"Ten viet tat", Truyen ngan Uc/Australian Short Stories, Rose Moxham (ed), Trinh Lu (translator), Hoi Nhaa Van, 2005
  • "Cockleshell", Harvard Review, No. 27, Christina Thompson (ed), 2004
  • "Landing", A Place on Earth: An Anthology of Nature Writing from Australia and North America, Mark Tredinnick (ed), University of Nebraska Press and University of New South Wales Press, 2003
  • "How the Reef was Won", The Bulletin, vol. 121 no. 6384, 5 August 2003
  • "Aquifer", The Beacon Best of 2001, Junot Diaz (ed), Beacon Press, 2001

Children's books

  • Jesse (1988)
  • Lockie Leonard, Human Torpedo (1990)
  • The Bugalugs Bum Thief (1991)
  • Lockie Leonard, Scumbuster (1993)
  • Lockie Leonard, Legend (1997)
  • The Deep (1998) - picture book illustrated by Karen Louise

Non-fiction

  • Land's Edge (1993) - with Trish Ainslie and Roger Garwood
  • Local Colour: Travels in the Other Australia (1994), republished in the U.S. as Australian Colors: Images of the Outback (1998) - photography and text by Bill Bachman, additional text by Tim Winton
  • Down to Earth: Australian Landscapes (1999) - text by Tim Winton and photographs by Richard Woldendorp
  • Smalltown (2009) - text by Tim Winton and photographs by Martin Mischkulnig
  • Island Home (2015)
  • Tide-Lands - Idris Murphy (2015) text by Tim Winton and art by Idris Murphy
  • The Boy Behind the Curtain (2016)

Dramatisations

  • That Eye The Sky adapted by Justin Monjo and Richard Roxburgh - stage New Theatre, Newtown
  • Cloudstreet adapted by Paige Gibbs - ABC radio
  • Cloudstreet adapted by Nick Enright and Justin Monjo. First performed by Black Swan Theatre Company. Toured internationally with Belvoir Street Theatre
  • Lockie Leonard, Human Torpedo adapted by Paige Gibbs. First performed by the Perth Theatre Company
  • Lockie Leonard, Scumbuster adapted by Garry Fry. First performed by Theatre South, Wollongong 1998
  • Bugalugs Bum Thief adapted by Spare Parts Puppet Theatre
  • Bugalugs Bum Thief adapted by Monkey Baa Theatre Company - live theatre
  • The Deep adapted by Spare Parts Puppet Theatre
  • Blueback adapted by Peta Murray for Terrapin Puppet Theatre and Spare Parts Puppet Theatre
  • The Turning adapted by Bill McCluskey performed by the Perth Theatre Company for the 2008 Perth International Writer's Festival (PIAF)

Adaptations

  • A film based on That Eye the Sky, directed by John Ruane, was released in 1994
  • A film based on In The Winter Dark directed by James Bogle was released in 1998
  • Two television series based on the Lockie Leonard books. The first series screened in 2007, the second in 2010.
  • A film adaptation of short story 'The Water Was Dark and Went Forever Down', 2009.
  • A TV miniseries based on Cloudstreet was aired in 2011.
  • A film based on The Turning was released in September 2013. It was nominated for and won many awards.
  • A film adaptation of The Riders was in development but there have been serious problems.
  • An opera adaptation of The Riders Victorian Opera/Malthouse Theatre 2014
  • An opera adaptation of Cloudstreet State Opera of South Australia. Her Majesty's Theatre, Adelaide, premiered May 12 and 13 2016.
  • A film adaptation of the short story 'Secrets' directed by Michael Rowe is in development.
  • A film adaptation of Breath filming underway April 2016

Critical works about Winton

  • Tim Winton: Critical Essays, Lyn McCredden and Nathanael O'Reilly (eds), University of Western Australia Publishing, 2014
  • Mind the Country: Tim Winton's fiction, Salhia Ben-Messahel, University of Western Australia Press, 2006
  • Tim Winton: the writer and his work, Michael McGirr, Macmillan Education, 1999
  • Tim Winton: a celebration, Hilary McPhee (ed), National Library of Australia, (1999)
  • Reading Tim Winton, Richard Rossiter and Lyn Jacobs (eds), Angus & Robertson, (1993)

Fear of refugees turns us into a heartless nation â€
src: www.echo.net.au


Awards and nominations

  • Four time Miles Franklin Award winner, 1984, 1992, 2002, 2009
  • Two time Booker Prize nominee 1995, 2002
  • Winton was included in the Bulletin's "100 Most Influential Australians" list in 2006
  • Australian National Living Treasure 1997
  • Centenary Medal for service to literature and the community 2001
  • Friends of the National Library of Australia Celebration Award 1999
  • Australian Society of Authors Medal for Community work re 'Save Ningaloo Reef' campaign 2003

Full list of awards and nominations:

An Open Swimmer

  • 1981 Australian Vogel National Literary Award

Shallows

  • 1984 Miles Franklin Award,
  • 1985 Joint Winner Western Australian Premier's Book Award - Fiction

Scission and Other Stories

  • 1985 Western Australian Council Literary Award
  • 1985 Joint Winner Western Australian Premier's Book Award - Fiction

Minimum of Two and Other Stories

  • 1988 Winner Western Australian Premier's Book Award - Fiction

Jesse (picture book)

  • 1990 Winner Western Australian Premier's Book Award: Children's Book

Cloudstreet

  • 1991 Miles Franklin Award
  • 1991 NBC Banjo Award for Fiction
  • 1991 Western Australian Premier's Book Award Fiction
  • 1992 Deo Gloria Award

Related to Cloudstreet

  • 1999 AWGIE Award (for playwrights Nick Enright & Justin Monjo)
  • 2002 Helpmann Award (Best Direction of a Play : Neil Armfield)
  • 2002 Helpmann Award (Best Play)

Lockie Leonard, Human Torpedo

  • 1991 Joint winner Western Australian Premier's Book Award: Children's Book
  • 1993 American Library Association Best Book for Young Adults Award
  • 1996 Winner YABBA Awards: Fiction for Older Readers

Lockie Leonard, Scumbuster

  • 1993 Wilderness Society Environment Award

The Bugalugs Bum Thief

  • 1994 Winner CROW Award (Children Reading Outstanding Writers): Focus list (Years 3-5)
  • 1998 Winner YABBA Awards: Fiction for Younger Readers

The Riders

  • 1995 Booker Prize for Fiction (shortlist)
  • 1995 Commonwealth Writers Prize (South East Asia and South Pacific Region, Best Book)

Blueback

  • 1998 Bolinda Audio Book Awards
  • 1998 Wilderness Society Environment Award
  • 1999 WAYRBA Hoffman Award for Young Readers,

Lockie Leonard, Legend

  • 1998 Family Award for Children's Literature,

Dirt Music

  • 2001 Western Australian Premier's Book Award Premier's Prize - Book of Year
  • 2001 Western Australian Premier's Book Award Premier's Prize - Fiction
  • 2001 Good Reading Award, 2001
  • 2002 Australian Booksellers Association Book of the Year Award
  • 2002 Man Booker Prize for Fiction (shortlist)
  • 2002 Miles Franklin Award
  • 2002 New South Wales Premier's Literary Award, Christina Stead Prize for Fiction
  • 2002 Kiriyama Pacific Rim Book Prize, Fiction, 2002 - shortlist

The Turning

  • 2004 Colin Roderick Award, 2004 - joint winner
  • 2005 Queensland Premier's Literary Awards, Best Fiction Book
  • 2005 New South Wales Premier's Literary Awards, Christina Stead Prize for Fiction
  • 2005 Inaugural Frank O'Connor International Short Story Award - shortlisted
  • 2005 Commonwealth Writers Prize, South East Asia and South Pacific Region, Best Book - commended,

Breath

  • 2008 Age Book of the Year, Fiction - winner
  • 2008 Indie Awards -- Fiction
  • 2009 Miles Franklin Award
  • 2009 Shortlisted Commonwealth Writers' Prize, South East Asia and the South Pacific Region
  • 2009 Shortlisted New South Wales Premier's Literary Awards, Christina Stead Prize

Eyrie

  • 2014 shortlisted Queensland Literary Awards -- Fiction Book Award
  • 2014 shortlisted Voss Literary Prize
  • 2014 winner Western Australian Premier's Book Awards -- People's Choice Award
  • 2014 shortlisted Western Australian Premier's Book Awards -- Fiction
  • 2014 shortlisted Australian Book Industry Awards (ABIA) -- Australian Literary Fiction Book of the Year
  • 2014 shortlisted Miles Franklin Literary Award
  • 2014 shortlisted Indie Awards -- Fiction
  • 2014 shortlisted Victorian Premier's Literary Awards -- Fiction

Island Home : A Landscape Memoir

  • 2015 highly commended The Fellowship of Australian Writers Victoria Inc. National Literary Awards -- FAW Excellence in Non-fiction Award I
  • 2015 shortlisted Colin Roderick Award
  • 2016 shortlisted New South Wales Premier's Literary Awards --Douglas Stewart Prize for Non-Fiction
  • 2016 winner Australian Book Industry Awards (ABIA) -- Australian General Non-Fiction Book of the Year
  • 2016 shortlisted Prime Minister's Literary Awards -- Non-Fiction
  • 2016 shortlisted Queensland Literary Awards -- Non-Fiction Book Award

The Boy Behind the Curtain

  • 2017 longlisted Indie Awards -- Nonfiction

Mandurah student honoured at Tim Winton Awards | Mandurah Mail
src: nnimgt-a.akamaihd.net


References


Tim Winton launches book at Christ Church | Christ Church Grammar ...
src: www.ccgs.wa.edu.au


External links

  • http://www.austlit.edu.au/austlit/page/A28121 Austit - Awards

Source of article : Wikipedia