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The Adelaide Festival Awards for Literature were established in 1986 and are an initiative of the Government of South Australia, managed through (Arts SA ). They are granted biennially to the judged-best authors in Australian children’s literature, fiction, innovation, non-fiction and poetry. The awards, which judge the best works published in Australia in the previous two years, are the nation’s most competitive literary awards (761 entries submitted for 2010). There is a total prize pool of $160,000, and these awards honour the best in Australian literature. The Premier’s Award recognises the most outstanding published book submitted to the awards. The awards recognise published and unpublished works by emerging and established writers, across a number of genres. In 2012 a Young Adult Fiction Award was included for the first time. There are seven national awards (for published works) and two awards and two fellowships specifically for South Australian writers. == Premier’s Award == * 2014 ''Cold Light'' by Frank Moorhouse * 2012 ''That Deadman Dance'' by Kim Scott (Picador Australia) * 2010 ''Tales from Outer Suburbia'' by Shaun Tan (Allen and Unwin) * 2008 ''Urban Myths: 210 Poems'' by John Tranter (University of Queensland Press) * 2006 ''Sixty Lights'' by Gail Jones (Vintage Books) * 2004 ''Wild Surmise'' by Dorothy Porter (Picador) * 2002 ''True History of the Kelly Gang'' by Peter Carey (University of Queensland Press) * 2000 ''Mr Darwin's Shooter'' by Roger McDonald (Vintage Books) * 1998 ''The Drowner'' by Robert Drewe (Pan MacMillan) * 1996 ''The Future Eaters'' by Tim Flannery (Reed Books) 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Adelaide Festival Awards for Literature」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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