Aidan Coleman (born 1976) is an Australian poet and speechwriter.
Born in Aberystwyth, Wales, Aidan Coleman grew up in Nottingham, England, and emigrated to Australia when he was eight. He studied at the University of Adelaide, and taught secondary English and History for a number of years before becoming a speechwriter. [1]
His poetry collections have been shortlisted for the NSW Premiers' Kenneth Slessor Prize, [2] the Adelaide Festival Awards for Literature [3] and the Western Australian Premier's Book Awards. [4]
The Main North Road - Vagabond Press, 2002
Sun In Winter - Picaro Press, 2010
Avenues & Runways - Brandl & Schlesinger, 2006
Asymmetry - Brandl & Schlesinger, 2012
Mount Sumptuous - Wakefield Press, 2020
Catch Fire: Friendly Street Poets 33 - Wakefield Press, 2009
Light and Glorie - Pantaenus Press, 2012
Insight Shakespeare Plays - Insight Publications, 2008-2014
Titles in the series: Romeo and Juliet, Macbeth, A Midsummer Night's Dream, Othello, The Merchant of Venice, King Lear, Julius Caesar, Hamlet
Bruce Victor Beaver was an Australian poet and novelist.
Alec Derwent Hope was an Australian poet and essayist known for his satirical slant. He was also a critic, teacher and academic. He was referred to in an American journal as "the 20th century's greatest 18th-century poet".
John Jefferson Bray, was an Australian lawyer, judge, academic, university administrator, Crown officer, and published poet.
Brian Albert Castro is an Australian novelist and essayist.
Christopher Keith Wallace-Crabbe is an Australian poet and emeritus professor in the Australian Centre, University of Melbourne.
The Kenneth Slessor Prize for Poetry is awarded annually as part of the New South Wales Premier's Literary Awards for a book of collected poems or for a single poem of substantial length published in book form. It is named after Kenneth Slessor (1901–1971).
Rosemary de Brissac Dobson, AO was an Australian poet, who was also an illustrator, editor and anthologist. She published fourteen volumes of poetry, was published in almost every annual volume of Australian Poetry and has been translated into French and other languages.
John Alan Scott is an English-Australian poet, novelist and academic.
Ouyang Yu is a contemporary Chinese-Australian author, translator and academic.
Ursula Dubosarsky is an Australian writer of fiction and non-fiction for children and young adults, whose work is characterised by a child's vision and comic voice of both clarity and ambiguity. She has won nine national literary prizes, including five New South Wales Premier's Literary Awards, more than any other writer in the Awards' 30-year history. She was appointed the Australian Children's Laureate for 2020–2021.
Robert Adamson is an Australian poet and publisher.
Marcel Weyland is a translator of Adam Mickiewicz's Pan Tadeusz and of Echoes: Poems of the Holocaust. 'The Word: 200 Years of Polish Poetry', 2010, ed. Brandl & Schlesinger, Blackheath, NSW, Australia, ISBN 978-1-921556-03-6. His most recent published work is the translation of the selected work of Julian Tuwim, Brandl & Schlesinger, Blackheath NSW, ISBN 9780994429780.
David Gordon Brooks is an Australian poet, novelist, short-fiction writer and essayist. The author of four published novels, four collections of short stories and five collections of poetry, he has been described as 'one of Australia's most skilled, unusual, and versatile writers'. His first collection of poetry, The Cold Front (1983), won the Ann Elder Award and was shortlisted for the NSW Premier's Prize; The Book of Sei (1985), his first collection of stories, was said by Don Anderson to be 'the most exciting short-fiction debut in Australian since Peter Carey's'; his second novel, The Fern Tattoo (2007), was shortlisted for the Miles Franklin award. His fiction has drawn frequent comparison with Italo Calvino and Jorge Luis Borges. From 2000 until 2018 he was co-editor of the journal Southerly. He has become increasingly involved in animal advocacy, writing extensively for and about animals and animal suffering. He is a vegan.
Sarah Day is an English-born Australian poet and teacher. She was also the poetry editor of Island Magazine for several years.
Rhyll McMaster is a contemporary Australian poet and novelist. She has worked as a secretary, a nurse and a sheep farmer. She now lives in Sydney and has written full-time since 2000. She is a recipient of the Barbara Jefferis Award.
Timoshenko Aslanides was an Australian poet.
Benjamin Roy Winch is an Australian writer and musician. Brought up in the Adelaide Hills of South Australia, Winch performed in the alternative rock band Movement from 1990-92 before starting to write fiction. His books include Liadhen, My Boyfriend's Father and Vanishing Points.
John Foulcher is an Australian poet and teacher.
The Adelaide Festival Awards for Literature comprise a group of biennially-granted literary awards established in 1986 by the Government of South Australia, announced during Adelaide Writers' Week, as part of the Adelaide Festival. The awards include national as well as state-based prizes, and offer three fellowships for South Australian writers. Several categories have been added to the original four.
Stephen Kenneth Kelen, known as S. K. Kelen, is an Australian poet and educator. S. K. Kelen began publishing poetry in 1973, when he won a Poetry Australia contest for young poets and several of his poems were published in that journal.