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black&write! publications

Since 2011, black&write! has played a key role in publishing numerous books by Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander authors across Australia. These works by First Nations writers include illustrated children's stories, literary fiction, young adult novels and poetry collections. Scroll down to see which writers have had black&write! as part of their writing journey.

These publications are all available for purchase from Library Shop.

Which First Nations author is next on your reading list?

A bright book cover showing two dark skinned young girls on a pink background. They are surrounded by flowers and sparkles. The text says Washpool by Lisa Fuller.

Washpool by Lisa Fuller

(Hachette Australia, 2025)

A magical middle-grade adventure about two sisters who need to rely on their own wits and each other when they're pulled into a new world, from black&write! fellow and bestselling author, Lisa Fuller.

Sisters Bella and Cienna are different in lots of ways. Bella is quiet and shy, and Cienna is always surrounded by friends. One thing they have in common is their love for the local swimming spot, Washpool. One weekend, while they are at Washpool with their family, the girls are transported to a different world.

They then encounter enigmatic Esura, who encourages them to venture further into Muse, where the Summer Feast - a time when many peoples gather for a week of fun and games - is due to start.

But when they find out Lady Dragon's egg is missing, Bella and Cienna must use their smarts to help with the search and bringing the egg back to safety before they figure out how to get back home.

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An  eye catching illustrated book cover with a picture of a huge gum tree in the foreground, with a blue twilit sky in the background. The text reads Brightest Wild by Tania Crampton Larking

Brightest Wild by Tania Crampton-Larking

(Hachette Australia, 2025)

A gently lyrical story about discovering Country and the importance of family, friendship and the magic of the bush, from an emerging Indigenous talent and winner of a black&write! Fellowship.

When eleven-year-old Alex moves to Adelaide from London after her mother gets engaged to a man across the globe, Alex must negotiate a new country, a new school, and (most difficult of all) a new stepbrother, the prickly teenaged Koen.

What sustains Alex in this strange new world is the wonder of the natural world around her, particularly a magnificent tree that comes to represent magic, resilience and strength.

Alex discovers the mystery of the bush, the true impact of climate change and a passion to fight for what is right.

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A bright picture book cover showing lots of people playing tennis over a washing line in a backyard with red dirt and gum trees.

Backyard Tennis by Carl Merrison
Illustrated by Samantha Campbell

(Hachette Australia, 2024)

Mum loves tennis, but we don't have a court out here.
One day, she gets out her old racquets and takes me into the backyard.
'I'll teach you how to play,' Mum says, and our tennis adventure begins.

Follow a cast of sport-loving kids as they hop through the backyards of their neighbourhood in the Kimberley, collecting equipment and friends to play with as they go, from award-winning creators Carl Merrison and Samantha Campbell.

A joyful series that celebrates sport, where the fun only grows with family and friends!

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A bright book cover showing a wombat walking on its hind legs along a winding path. The wombat is carrying a swag and a hat. It is waving at the sky with one hand. The text reads Wurrtoo The Wombat Who Fell in Love with the Sky written by Tylissa Elisara and illustrated by Dylan Finney

Wurrtoo: The Wombat Who Fell in Love with the Sky by Tylissa Elisara
Illustrated by Dylan Finney

(Hachette Australia, 2024)

It all began in a burrow. The fifty-fifth burrow of Bushland Avenue to be exact. If you were ever lucky enough to find this beautiful clearing on Kangaroo Island where the arching gum trees kiss, you'd know that Wurrtoo's home is the one at the end with the big red trapdoor and large gold doorknob. Can you see it?

Wurrtoo the wombat lives a quiet and solitary life in his burrow on Kangaroo Island, hoping to one day travel to the mainland and marry the love of his life, the sky. When Wurrtoo inadvertently saves Kuula the koala from a bushfire, he acquires the adventure companion he didn't know he needed.

With Kuula by his side, Wurrtoo leaves the safety of his burrow and sets out on an epic journey to cross the island, reach the mainland and climb to the top of tallest tree in the Forest of Dreaming. But it's fire season, and danger and strange creatures lurk behind every gum tree. To make it, the pair must face their fears together, learn the importance of friendship and discover the power of wombat wishes.

Tylissa Elisara draws on classic children's literature in the tradition of Winnie the Pooh and Blinky Bill as well as stories from her own Narungga, Kaurna and Adnyamathanha heritage in this unique middle-grade novel about friendship, adventure and facing your fears.

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Cover of the body country by Susie Anderson which is white with blue and orange watercolour dots

the body country by Susie Anderson

(Hachette Australia, 2023)

'I keep looking at the stars
to see the universe, but the joke is
I am the universe.'

A powerful collection of poetry from an award-winning poet and black&write! Fellowship winner, the body country is an evocative exploration of a world that too often marginalises and the power of a land that can offer connection. A meditation of wandering and wondering on Country, inviting the reader to understand the complexities and changing forms of self and love.

A Wergaia and Wemba Wemba woman, Susie Anderson captures profound meaning in moments often lost in the busyness of a day, encouraging us all to stop and allow ourselves the space to notice. To notice the shape of a mouth as it says goodbye; the colour of the sky as you fall in love; the way a steering wheel is turned carelessly after many wines; the crunch of dry ground after drought; the smell of fire on the wind; the movement of ants before rain; the power a word, a dress, a piece of art can give to run towards something new.

  • SHORTLISTED Victorian Premier's Literary Awards Prize for Poetry 2024
  • SHORTLISTED New South Wales Premier's UTS Glenda Adams Award for New Writing 2024
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A colourful children's book cover showing four children running after a football. The text reads Backyard Footy by Carl Merrison and illustrated by Samantha Campbell

Backyard Footy by Carl Merrison
Illustrated by Samantha Campbell

(Hachette Australia, 2023)

Jy is playing football alone in his small backyard in the Kimberley, but when he accidentally kicks the ball over the fence, a footy adventure begins! Footy by yourself is fun, but playing with mates is better.

The first title in a joyful black&write! Fellowship-winning series, where the fun only grows with family and friends!

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A black book cover with blue and white text. Text reads a captivating young adult debut from the winner of the black and write writing Fellowship. The Upwelling by Lystra Rose

The Upwelling by Lystra Rose

(Hachette Australia, 2022)

Kirra is the great-granddaughter of a truth dreamer, and, like Great Nanna Clara, no-one believes her night-visions are coming true. When an end-of-the-world nightmare forces her to surf where her brother was killed, she time-slips into a place that could ruin her life, here, and in the Dreaming.

Narn is the son of a well-respected Elder and holds an enviable role in his saltwater clan. Though he bears the marks of a man, many treat him like an uninitiated boy, including the woman he wants to impress.

Tarni is the daughter of a fierce hunter and the custodian of a clever gift. Somehow, she understands Kirra when no-one else can. But who sent this unexpected visitor: a powerful ancient healer or an evil shadow-spirit?

When death threatens all life, can a short-sighted surfer, a laidback dolphin caller and a feisty language unweaver work together to salvage our future?

  • WINNER New South Wales Premier's Ethel Turner Prize for Young People's Literature 2023
  • WINNER Victorian Premier's Literary Awards Prize for Indigenous Writing 2023
  • SHORTLISTED New South Wales Premier's UTS Glenda Adams Award for New Writing 2023
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Book cover for Song of the Crocodile by Nardi Simpson. Cover includes a dying tree, and in the background a town with stars above in the nights sky.

Song of the Crocodile by Nardi Simpson 

(Hachette Australia, 2020)

Darnmoor is the home of the Billymil family, three generations who have lived in this 'gateway town'. Race relations between Indigenous and settler families are fraught, though the rigid status quo is upheld through threats and soft power rather than the overt violence of yesteryear.

As progress marches forwards, Darnmoor and its surrounds undergo rapid social and environmental changes, but as some things change, some stay exactly the same. The Billymil family are watched (and sometimes visited) by ancestral spirits and spirits of the recently deceased, who look out for their descendants and attempt to help them on the right path.

When the town's secrets start to be uncovered the town will be rocked by a violent act that forever shatters a century of silence.

  • WINNER Australian Literature Society Gold Medal
  • WINNER Queensland Literary Awards Fiction Book of the Year
  • SHORTLISTED Age Book of the Year
  • SHORTLISTED Victorian Premier's Literary Awards Prize for Indigenous Writing
  • SHORTLISTED NSW Premier's Awards New Writing Award
  • SHORTLISTED Readings Prize for New Australian Fiction
  • LONGLISTED Stella Prize
  • LONGLISTED Voss Literary Prize
  • LONGLISTED Miles Franklin Literary Award
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Terra Nullius by Claire G Coleman

Terra Nullius by Claire G. Coleman

(Hachette Australia, 2017)

In the near future Australia is about to experience colonisation once more. What have we learned from our past? A daring debut novel from the winner of the 2016 black&write! writing fellowship.

  • SHORTLISTED Stella Prize 2018
  • HIGHLY COMMENDED Victorian Premier's Literary Awards 2017
  • SHORTLISTED ABIA Matt Richell Award for New Writers 2018
  • SHORTLISTED Aurealis Award for a Science Fiction Novel 2017
  • LONGLISTED Indie Book Award for Debut Fiction 2018
  • NOMINATED Ditmar Award Best New Talent 2018
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A book cover showing lemon trees beneath a blue sky. The text reads Lemons in the chicken wire, Alison Whittaker.

Lemons in the Chicken Wire by Alison Whittaker

(Magabala Books, 2016)

From a remarkable new voice in Indigenous writing comes this highly original collection of poems bristling with stunning imagery and gritty textures. At times sensual, always potent, Lemons in the Chicken Wire delivers a collage of work that reflects rural identity through a rich medley of techniques and forms. It is an audacious, lyrical and linguistically lemon flavoured poetry debut that possesses a rare edginess and seeks to challenge our imagination beyond the ordinary. Alison Whittaker demonstrates that borders, whether physical or imagined, are no match for our capacity for love.

  • SHORTLISTED Scanlon Award 2016
  • SHORTLISTED ASAL Awards — Mary Gilmore Award 2017
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Book cover for My Father's Shadow. Mysterious silhouette of a person facing a cloudy night and large moon.

My Father’s Shadow by Jannali Jones

(Magabala Books, 2019)

Kaya is completing her Higher School Certificate when she is woken in the middle of the night by her mother. They are to pack immediately and go to their holiday home in the Blue Mountains. Her father is ‘not coming back’. He has been involved in a court case to give evidence against some dangerous criminals.

Months later, they are still in hiding and the mysteries are multiplying. Her best friend, Jenna, has gone overseas and Kaya is trying to make sense of what is really happening.

Gunai author Jannali Jones has crafted a thrilling story which stays on the edge right to the end.

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Becoming Kirrali Lewis by Jane Harrison

Becoming Kirrali Lewis by Jane Harrison

(Magabala Books, 2015)

Set within the explosive cultural shifts of the 1960s and 1980s, Becoming Kirrali Lewis chronicles the journey of a young Aboriginal teenager as she leaves her home town in rural Victoria to take on a law degree in Melbourne in 1985. Adopted at birth by a white family, Kirrali doesn't question her cultural roots until a series of life-changing events force her to face up to her true identity.

  • SHORTLISTED Prime Minister’s Literary Awards (YA category) 2016
  • HIGHLY COMMENDED Victorian Premier’s Literary Awards 2016
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Book cover showing a yellow sun with a silhouette of a young man and a bird. The text reads Calypso Summer. Cruiser. Crusader. Lover. By Jared Thomas.

Calypso Summer by Jared Thomas

(Magabala Books, 2014)

Meet Calypso, a young Nukunu man in Rasta guise, fresh out of high school with nowhere to go. After failing to snag his dream job, Calypso starts packing shelves at a local health food shop where he feels pressured to help the owner with his out-there plans to gather native plants for natural remedies. His mother points him in the direction of his family living in the Southern Flinders Ranges and, with the support of a sassy, smart Ngadjuri girl whose passion for cricket rivals his own, he discovers that his people, their land and their culture are the perfect medicine.

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Cover of Rift Breaker by Tristan Savage

Rift Breaker by Tristan Savage

(Magabala Books, 2014)

After conducting welding repairs on the outer hull of a space vessel, token human and lowly engineer Milton Lance returns to a silent, gloomy interior. The crew are dead, and the only survivor he can find is an annoying, pointy-eared simian. When a mysterious gun-toting woman rescues the stranded pair, an unlikely trio is formed. But escaping the ship is the easy part, for Milton discovers he is not an ordinary human at all, but a saviour of worlds. Rift Breaker is a sci-fi action adventure driven by distinctive characters, and explores themes of alienation, identity and independence.

  • WINNER Aurealis Awards — Kris Hembury Encouragement Award 2014
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Deadly D and Justice Jones: Making the Team By Scott Prince and Dave Hartley

Deadly D and Justice Jones: Making the Team By Scott Prince and Dave Hartley

(Magabala Books, 2013)

Eleven-year-old Dylan has to move from Mt Isa to Brisbane and he’s not happy. But as soon as he gets to Flatwater State School he finds a former Mount Isa Miner’s footy supporter in his principal and a ‘Broncos tragic’ as a teacher. He also makes a friend in Justice Jones and an enemy in Jared Knutz. Dylan is cursed with an abnormality transforming him into a fully-grown man whenever he gets angry. Always a worry, the ‘curse’ proves to be a blessing in the city when his alter ego attracts the interest of the Broncos during a class excursion to watch the team train. Dylan becomes ‘Deadly D’ – a star player with the fire to rival even the great Prince! But how will he continue to keep the ‘curse’ a secret?

  • WINNER Speech Pathology Australia Indigenous Children's Book of the Year 2014
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Rise of the Fallen by Teagan Chilcott

Rise of the Fallen by Teagan Chilcott

(Magabala Books, 2013)

Rise of the Fallen is a young adult paranormal romance, the first in a series of novels with demons, angels and elementals at war for power. This contemporary, super-sharp story with sardonic humour features a feisty main character in Emilie and a love triangle. The battles take place in familiar settings: shopping malls, street corners, the Australian bushland and up and down the Queensland coast. Emilie, fire elemental, and Cael, water elemental, are wanted by the entire demonic realm. Lying low in the human realm – as students at a Brisbane school – Emilie encounters the mysterious and charming Soul, and soon finds herself lost in the very world she's been running from for centuries.

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Bakir and Bi by Jillian Boyd and Tori-Jay Mordey

Bakir and Bi by Jillian Boyd and Tori-Jay Mordey

(Magabala Books, 2013)

Bakir and Bi is based on a Torres Strait Islander creation story with illustrations by 18-year-old Tori-Jay Mordey. Bakir (rock) and Mar (storm bird) live on a remote island called Egur with their two young children. While fishing on the beach Bakir comes across a very special pelican (Bakir's totem is a pelican) named Bi. A famine occurs, and life on the island is no longer harmonious. One day Bakir and Bi disappear and Mar and the children are forced to make the journey to another island by canoe... and so begins the adventure.

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Grace Beside Me by Sue McPherson

Grace Beside Me by Sue McPherson

(Magabala Books, 2012)

A warmly rendered story of life in a small town that interweaves the mundane with the profound and the spiritual. Told through the eyes of teenager, Fuzzy Mac, awkward episodes of teen rivalry and romance sit alongside the mystery of Nan’s visions and a ghostly encounter. Against a backdrop of quirky characters, including the holocaust survivor who went to school with Einstein and the little priest always rushing off to bury someone before the heat gets to them, Grace Beside Me is full of humour and timely wisdom.

  • FINALIST Deadly Awards (Outstanding Achievement in Literature) 2012
  • SHORTLISTED Prime Minister’s Literary Awards (YA category) 2013
  • Released as children’s TV series with NITV/ABC/Foxtel 2018
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Ruby Moonlight by Ali Cobby Eckermann

Ruby Moonlight by Ali Cobby Eckermann

(Magabala Books, 2012)

Ruby Moonlight is a verse novel that centres around the impact of colonisation in mid-north South Australia around 1880. Ruby, refugee of a massacre, shelters in the woods where she befriends an Irishman trapper. The poems convey how fear of discovery is overcome by the need for human contact, which, in a tense unravelling of events, is forcibly challenged by an Aboriginal lawman. The natural world is richly observed and Ruby’s courtship is measured by the turning of the seasons.

  • WINNER Deadly Awards (Outstanding Achievement in Literature) 2012
  • WINNER Kenneth Slessor Poetry Prize 2013
  • WINNER Book of the Year Award in the NSW Premier’s Literary and History Awards 2013
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Other publications

Writing Black: New Indigenous Writing from Australia by Ellen Van Neerven

Writing Black: New Indigenous Writing from Australia, edited by Ellen Van Neerven

Free eBook available on iTunes (2014)

Writing Black: New Indigenous Writing from Australia brings together leading and emerging Indigenous writers, highlighting the strength of tradition and innovation in Australia’s oldest living cultures. Develpoed by black&write!, Writing Black features new writing from the likes of Bruce Pascoe, Tony Birch and Tara June Winch and photography by Jo-Anne Driessens. The strong voices of seminal poets Lionel Fogarty, Kerry Reed-Gilbert and Steven Oliver are pronounced through video and text, and an audio-visual immersion of the Torres Strait is delivered in Sylvia Nakachi’s story of home. There are many other surprises in store, with Siv Parker’s ground-breaking twitter fiction storytelling, and salty black humour from Marie Munkara.

Read more

black&write! is supported by the Copyright Agency's Cultural Fund and the Australian Government through the Australia Council, its arts funding and advisory body. We are proud to work with University of Queensland Press as the current black&write! Fellowship publishing partner.

We acknowledge Magabala Books and Hachette Australia as previous publishing partners, and our collaborations that have produced outstanding First Nations titles for Australian readers.

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