investigating power, privilege and inequality
- Written by Alexander Howard, Senior Lecturer, Discipline of English and Writing, University of Sydney

Michelle de Kretser has won the fiction prize in the 2025 Prime Minister’s Literary Awards. It’s her second major prize this year for her ambitious, experimental novel Theory and Practice, which won the 2025 Stella Prize (and was shortlisted for the Miles Franklin).
De Kretser headed a winners’ list that confronts moments of crisis and care. The six books – across fiction, nonfiction, Australian history, poetry, young adult literature and children’s literature – reckon with histories of illness and inequality. They consider what it means to live according to one’s principles.
The other winners are Rick Morton’s coruscating investigation into the Robodebt scandal Mean Streak (nonfiction), Geraldine Fela’s Critical Care: Nurses on the frontline of Australia’s AIDS crisis (Australian history), David Brooks The Other Side of Daylight (poetry), Peter Carnavas’ illustrated space novel Leo and Ralph (children’s literature) and Krystal Sutherland’s The Invocations (young adult literature).
These books shed fresh light on the way our institutions, social relations and personal imaginations are shaped – and how they might be remade. Taken together, they map the pressures and possibilities of contemporary Australian life.
Each winner receives A$80,000, with the shortlisted writers receiving $5,000 each – all tax-free.