David Whish-Wilson

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David Whish-Wilson (born 1966) is an Australian author of nine novels and three non-fiction books.

He was born in Newcastle, New South Wales but raised in Singapore, Victoria and Western Australia. He left Australia in 1984 to live in Europe, Africa and Asia, where he worked as a barman, actor, streetseller, labourer, exterminator, factory worker, gardener, clerk, travel agent, teacher and drug trial guinea pig. David’s first novel in the Frank Swann crime series, Line of Sight (Penguin Australia) was shortlisted for a Ned Kelly Award in 2012, and his novel True West was shortlisted for a Ned Kelly Award for Best Fiction in 2020. He has since written three more in the series – the first three being published in Germany by Suhrkamp Verlag. David wrote the Perth book in the NewSouth Books city series, which was short-listed for a WA Premiers Book Award. David also teaches in the prison system in Perth and previously in Fiji, where he started the countries first prisoner writing program.

He currently lives in Fremantle, Western Australia, where he coordinates the creative writing program at Curtin University.

Awards and nominations[edit]

  • 2010 Ned Kelly Awards: Shortlisted for Line of Sight
  • 2014 Shortlisted WA Premier's Book Awards for Perth
  • 2015 Winner Patricia Hackett Prize for Fiction for The Cook
  • 2020 Ned Kelly Awards: Shortlisted for True West[1]
  • 2022 WA Premiers Book Awards Fellowship: shortlisted
  • 2022 ARA Historical Novel Prize: longlisted for The Sawdust House

Works[edit]

Novels[edit]

  • The Summons (2006, Random House)
  • Line of Sight (2010, Penguin)[2]
  • "In Savage Freedom" in Hard Labour (Crime Factory, 2012)
  • Zero at the Bone (2013, Penguin)
  • Perth (2013, New South Publishing)
  • Old Scores (2016, Fremantle Press)
  • The Coves (2018, Fremantle Press)
  • True West (2019, Fremantle Press)
  • Shore Leave (2020, Fremantle Press)
  • The Sawdust House (2022, Fremantle Press)
  • I Am Already Dead (2023, Fremantle Press)

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ "Ned Kelly Awards 2020 shortlists announced". Books+Publishing. 26 August 2020. Retrieved 26 August 2020.
  2. ^ "David Whish-Wilson". Davidwhish-wilson.com. Retrieved 17 February 2016. "I therefore decided to write Line of Sight (ISBN 9780670073740) as a crime novel, inspired by real events relating to the murder of Shirley Finn, but one whose characters are entirely fictionalised"

External links[edit]