Mon. Jun 3rd, 2024
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Yankunytjatjara poet Ali Cobby Eckermann has won the top prize at the NSW Premier’s Literary Awards for her “stunning” verse novel She Is the Earth.

Eckermann won both Book of the Year and the Indigenous Writers’ Prize at the awards, taking home a total of $40,000.

A book cover for She Is the Earth by Ali Cobby Eckermann, featuring an image of red desert hills and a quote from Gloria Steinem
Eckermann’s next project after She Is the Earth is her first novel, which she describes as “a love story between two deserts”.(Supplied: Magabala Books)

The prize judges described the book — a series of poems about a woman connecting with both nature and thousands of years of history — as “sometimes gentle and sometimes sharp, both beautiful and terrible, and always profound in its exploration of healing, hope and the earth”.

It’s not the first time Eckermann has won Book of the Year at the event: She won the award and the Kenneth Slessor Prize for Poetry in 2013 for her previous verse novel Ruby Moonlight. That year, she was unable to attend the ceremony as she was visiting Ireland as the Australian poetry ambassador.

“It’s very overwhelming and very thrilling [to win],” Eckermann says. “It was 12 years ago when my brother flew to Sydney to accept a similar award from the NSW Premier’s Awards for Ruby Moonlight. For the recognition to also be given to She Is the Earth is beyond my dreams.”

This is the second year in a row that a First Nations author has won the top gong, after Gudanji and Wakaja author Debra Dank won a record four out of 14 awards in 2023 with her memoir We Come With This Place.

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