Tony Birch wins Book of the Year for timely novel about one of Australia’s great challenges

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Tony Birch wins Book of the Year for timely novel about one of Australia’s great challenges

By Jason Steger

They say timing is everything. If so, then the winners of this year’s The Age Book of the Year awards have found time on their sides.

Tony Birch, who won the fiction award for his novel that tackles the impact of domestic violence, Women & Children, said it was a book that was timely in relationship to current discussion of violence against women and children, although “it wasn’t written primarily with that issue in mind”.

Tony Birch wanted to write a novel about the depth of love in a family.

Tony Birch wanted to write a novel about the depth of love in a family.Credit: Chris Hopkins

Ross McMullin won the non-fiction prize for Life So Full of Promise, his biography of three men of great potential who were killed during World War I.

Forty years ago, when McMullin gave up working as a solicitor to follow his passion for history, his first book about Australia’s first official war artist, Will Dyson, was shortlisted for The Age award. “That was very encouraging to me at the time as a very inexperienced historian that my shift away from law might prove viable.”

The awards were presented by The Age editor Patrick Elligett at the Melbourne Town Hall at the opening of the Melbourne Writers Festival, which featured the acclaimed American author of The Hours, Michael Cunningham. The winners each received $10,000, thanks to the Copyright Agency’s Cultural Fund.

McMullin, who is on a speaking tour of country Victoria, was represented by his publisher.

The judges were writer Simon Caterson, historian Joy Damousi, bookseller Mark Rubbo and former publisher Louise Swinn.

Birch’s novel is set in 1965 and focuses on 11-year-old Joe Cluny’s family – sister Ruby, single mother Marion, and Joe’s adored grandfather, Charlie. One day, Marion’s sister, Oona, turns up having been bashed by her flashy boyfriend, Ray Lomax. The question is: How can the family get Oona out of Ray’s clutches?

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The judges said Birch had imbued his characters “with great humanity and a dignity that belies the difficulties of their lives; it’s a book that will live with you”.

While the writing of Women & Children had not been driven by the issue of domestic violence, Birch said it was a good thing if it became part of “those necessary discussions”. He had recently been asked to talk to two family violence organisations because they considered men had to be part of this conversation.

“But I did want to write a book which conveyed the depth of love in a family, and clearly that was the motivation for writing about the relationship between Joe and Charlie,” he said.

Ross McMullin says the deaths of the men he writes about robbed Australia of great talent.

Ross McMullin says the deaths of the men he writes about robbed Australia of great talent.Credit: Justin McManus

Birch has four grandchildren and said he was a loving grandfather who did a full day of care each week. “That experience of spending so much time around my grandchildren had a real impact on how I wanted to write the book,” he said.

The theme of redemption has been at the heart of many of Birch’s short stories and novels, and while not so central to Women & Children, he said there was a sense in Charlie’s response to the violence meted out to his daughter of him being able to resist becoming a violent man again as he might have done when younger.

The judges said McMullin’s Life So Full of Promise was painstakingly researched and a profoundly empathetic micro-history “showing how the full human cost of war goes far beyond those lives lost in violent conflict and the people immediately affected who are closest to them ... in the hands of a leading historian, aspects of a nation’s history assumed to be familiar may yield new and deeper insights that help to explain the world we live in today.”

Life so Full of Promise: Further Biographies of Australia’s Lost Generations, a follow-on from McMullin’s earlier prize-winning collective biography, Farewell Dear People, examines the lives of three men – Brian Pockley, Norman Callaway and Murdoch Mackay – whose deaths meant their considerable potential on the cricket field and elsewhere went unfulfilled.

McMullin said for characters to get a guernsey in the book, their talent had to be spectacular. “There had to be a way of showing in the narratives that the loss was obviously shattering for the families, but at a national level, a loss as well because they had such rich potential.”

While Callaway had the talent to become a Test cricketer and Pockley’s death in New Guinea on September 11, 1914, was “mourned more deeply and widely” than any other Australian fatality during the war, it was Mackay who had all the attributes and “could have been prime minister”, McMullin reckoned.

“One aspect I’ve felt for a long time,” he said, “is that perceptions of Robert Menzies’ dominance of our national politics are shallow if they don’t acknowledge that at the same time that he was dominant, a significant number of potential rivals had been in Western Front graves for decades and Mackay was very possibly one.”

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