Shankari Chandran wins the Miles Franklin with a sophisticated take on racism, cultural erasure and what it means to belong
- Written by Julienne van Loon, Associate Professor in Creative Writing, School of Culture & Communication, The University of Melbourne
“Race and racial identity and what it means to be Australian and who gets to decide that … that has been a part of my life here, for my entire life …,” says[1] Western Sydney author Shankari Chandran. “I’ve thought about it a lot but never had the courage to write about it.”
Chandran’s third book, Chai Time at Cinnamon Gardens[2], is the project with which she’s found her courage – and the move has paid off.
Chandran has been awarded $60,000 as winner of this year’s prestigious Miles Franklin Award. She joins a select list of Australian authors, including Melissa Lucashenko, Amanda Lohrey, Kim Scott and Tim Winton – all the way back to Patrick White, who was the inaugural winner[3] in 1957.
Read more: Queer disobedience and uncomfortable truths: your guide to the 2023 Miles Franklin shortlist[4]
Australian racism and Sri Lanka’s civil war
The Miles Franklin judges are not the first to recognise Chandran’s literary talent.
Her debut novel, Song of the Sun God[5], was longlisted[6] for the international Dublin Literary Award, shortlisted[7] for Sri Lanka’s Fairway National Literary Awards and is currently being adapted[8] for a television series. Her second novel, The Barrier[9], was shortlisted[10] for the Norma K. Hemming Award for Speculative Fiction.