Richard Flanagan

Australian author
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Also known as: Richard Miller Flanagan

Richard Flanagan (born 1961, Longford, Tasmania, Australia) is an Australian writer who is known for a series of critically acclaimed works, including the novel The Narrow Road to the Deep North (2013). He is widely considered “the finest Australian novelist of his generation.”

Background

Flanagan was raised in Rosebery, a remote mining town in the island state of Tasmania. He left high school when he was 16, but he later earned a B.A. (1983) in history from the University of Tasmania. In 1984 he was awarded a Rhodes scholarship to attend Worcester College, Oxford, where he earned a Masters of Letters.

Novels

His first novel, Death of a River Guide (1994), an account of a drowning man reflecting on his life and those of his ancestors, earned the 1996 Australian National Fiction Award. The book drew upon Flanagan’s past experience working as a river guide and kayaking down Tasmania’s Franklin River. That work was followed by the highly acclaimed novel The Sound of One Hand Clapping (1997), a tale of the harsh life of a Slovenian immigrant family in Tasmania during the 20th century. His novel Gould’s Book of Fish: A Novel in Twelve Fish (2001), about a 19th-century convict living in Tasmania, was awarded the 2002 Commonwealth Writers Prize (now the Commonwealth Book Prize) for best book as well as the Commonwealth’s Regional Prize for best book. The Unknown Terrorist (2006) is a modern-day thriller that takes aim at media-driven hysteria, and Wanting (2008) is a complex 19th-century tale set in Tasmania and England involving an Aboriginal girl and novelist Charles Dickens.

In 2013 Flanagan released The Narrow Road to the Deep North, which was based in part on the experience of Flanagan’s father as a prisoner of war during World War II. The novel was acclaimed for its brutally stark narrative of life as a prisoner and slave laborer as well as for its gripping examination of individual lives, personal relationships, and conflict that, despite taking place in a historical setting, was lauded as being relevant in modern times. The work was a labor of love for Flanagan, one that took him more than a decade to complete to his satisfaction: he reportedly discarded five drafts of the novel before submitting the final version. The Narrow Road to the Deep North received various honors, notably the Man Booker Prize (now the Booker Prize).

Flanagan’s next novel, First Person (2017), concerned a struggling writer who is hired to ghostwrite a conman’s memoir. In The Living Sea of Walking Dreams (2020), three siblings argue over medical treatment for their dying mother while the climate crisis worsens. The work, which includes elements of surrealism, explores people’s refusal to acknowledge harsh realities, whether it is impending death or an environmental catastrophe.

Nonfiction works

In addition to his novels, Flanagan has published essays and historical nonfiction, notably “Parish-Fed Bastards”: A History of the Politics of the Unemployed in Britain, 1884–1939 (1991) and Codename Iago: The Story of John Friedrich (1991, with Friedrich), an account of Australia’s most infamous conman. Notes on an Exodus (2016) is an essay about Syrian refugees, with illustrations by Ben Quilty. Question 7 (2023) is a memoir of Flanagan’s parents and Tasmania that blends elements of fiction and history. In 2024 it won the Baillie Gifford Prize, making Flanagan the first author to win both that prize and the Booker. However, Flanagan announced that he would not except the prize money for the Baillie Gifford until the fund manager of the award’s sponsor, British investment firm Baillie Gifford, promised to reduce its fossil fuel investments.

Journalism and film projects

Flanagan is also a respected journalist; his articles have appeared in The New Yorker magazine and the Paris newspaper Le Monde. He also directed the film adaptation of The Sound of One Hand Clapping (1998) and was one of the writers who worked on the screenplay for the epic Australia (2008) and its spin-off miniseries Faraway Downs (2023), directed by Baz Luhrmann.

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