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Siang Lu wins Miles Franklin award for Ghost Cities, ‘a genuine landmark in Australian literature'

Siang Lu wins Miles Franklin award for Ghost Cities, ‘a genuine landmark in Australian literature'

The Guardian24-07-2025
When Siang Lu found out he'd won the Miles Franklin literary award, he had a physical reaction. 'I was in such shock that I lost all feeling in my hands and legs,' the Brisbane-based author says. 'I teared up. I lost my voice a little bit. It was the first time in my life that I've ever had to ask someone with a straight face, 'Can you just please confirm to me that I'm not dreaming?''
The feeling Lu describes is akin to the surreal nature of his experimental, prize-winning novel, Ghost Cities. Set between modern and ancient times, and inspired by the vacant megacities of China, the sprawling, ambitious novel is shot through with absurdist humour, cultural commentary and satire in what the Miles Franklin judges describe as 'at once a grand farce and a haunting meditation on diaspora', and 'a genuine landmark in Australian literature'.
Many of Ghost Cities' characters, from emperors to civilians, are devoted to telling, and preserving, stories. It's something Lu hadn't realised until a keen-eyed reader pointed it out – now, he says it's key to the novel itself and the $60,000 prize he's just won.
'I think people are responding to a combination of the humour, which I care very deeply about, but also the idea that we should venerate art, storytellers and storytelling,' he says.
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'Amongst the cast of characters in Ghost Cities … It was the storytellers that had any hope of claiming agency. I did not consciously do that or plan that, but I recognise it now as something that is true, that my mind was working towards. I hope that at some subconscious level, this is what readers and the judging panel might have responded to: the love for storytelling and literature.'
Like many of Australia's most acclaimed writers, Lu works a full-time job (in tech) and has two children, aged nine and 11. Some of Ghost Cities was written many years ago on his hour-long commute to and from the office.
'From the outside in normal, real life, it might appear that in some ways, I've de-prioritised literature in my life: I work a normal job, try to be as present as I can for my children, do what I can for the community,' he says. 'But in fact, secretly, I've put literature above everything … I'm grateful for the things that ground me, because they inform the things that I want to write.'
Ghost Cities is Lu's second novel and follows 2022's The Whitewash, a madcap, satirical oral history blending real and fictional stories of Hollywood's race problem. An online project, The Beige Index (described as 'the Bechdel test for race'), is a companion piece of sorts.
The perennially shy author says it was a 'gift' for this to be his debut in the Australian literary world, because it meant 'I could be an advocate for something that I care about very deeply, which was more and better representation – that very quickly became like armour for me. I thought, 'Let me be a good advocate for this cause, and then I don't need to talk about myself,' which is a win-win.'
This year Lu was shortlisted for the Miles Franklin alongside Brian Castro (Chinese Postman), Michelle de Kretser (Theory and Practice), Winnie Dunn (Dirt Poor Islanders), Julie Janson (Compassion) and Fiona McFarlane (Highway 13). He observes that prize shortlists have become more diverse. 'I don't think that is possible without people behind the scenes, the judges themselves, the readers who are reading critically and thinking about these questions: where are we, where are we going, and how do we get there?' he says.
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But the author also believes it is, first and foremost, about the work itself: 'I've been in judging panels and session groups … [In] the conversations about whose voices we want to champion, always, always, the first cornerstone to that is quality.'
The writing community matters a lot to Lu. He expresses it in his own idiosyncratic way through what he calls 'Silly Bookstagram', where he Photoshops fellow authors' book covers to be about himself. Lu stresses that the braggadocious nature of the posts is an exaggerated persona but he enjoys connecting with, and promoting, other writers through this tongue-in-cheek project, which has had a real-life impact.
'It started to hit me when those fellow authors actually showed up for my book launch in Sydney,' he says. 'I didn't know them other than through Instagram but it felt like a way to connect in the most 'me' way possible.'
So what's next for Australia's latest Miles Franklin winner? Lu is tight-lipped but promises one thing: 'It's gonna be weirder than Ghost Cities.'
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Major update on I'm A Celeb as ITV make decision on show's future amid talks with Aussie officials over jungle set
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  • The Sun

Major update on I'm A Celeb as ITV make decision on show's future amid talks with Aussie officials over jungle set

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I'd never wear budgie smugglers – but I did once help smuggle a budgie
I'd never wear budgie smugglers – but I did once help smuggle a budgie

The Guardian

time2 hours ago

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I'd never wear budgie smugglers – but I did once help smuggle a budgie

Incredibly, given all the trouble in the world, we were short of an item or two on my BBC radio show recently. Someone suggested something about budgie smugglers coming back into fashion. Hardly very Reithian, is it? On the other hand, we all need a break from the dark stuff. And anyway, it turned out there was plenty in the budgie smugglers story with which to inform, educate and entertain our listeners. For a start, we needed to define the term. I'd been banging on about budgie smugglers on the radio all morning when I got a text from my mum demanding I explain what the devil these budgie smugglers were. In fact, she was so unfamiliar with the term that she spelt it phonetically using her Croatian keyboard, which renders it 'bađi smagles'. So, to be clear, we're talking men's swimwear, with bađi smagles being the tight, not-leaving-much-to-the-imagination style, as distinct from rather more modest swimming shorts which, mercifully, have become the norm. The tight ones had fallen out of favour but now, someone read somewhere, they were making a comeback. Eyewateringly tight swimming pants have been referred to as budgie smugglers for barely a quarter of a century, the description originating in a 1998 Australian television series called The Games, which satirised the 2000 Sydney Olympics. We can only wonder what kind of twisted mind came up with it, or indeed what kind of gentleman's arrangement they saw that looked as if there might have been a couple of budgerigars down there. I for one have never seen such a thing and certainly have no desire to. I can't get past the thought of some fella, engaged in rearranging things, inadvertently releasing a couple – or would it be three? – relieved budgies, freeing them to live better lives. If the fashion comeback is for real, it'll be good news for the Australian brand, Budgy Smuggler. Shame on them for the spelling but we'll let that pass. Their website says they are 'On a mission to free the thighs of the world'. That's an interestingly demure take on the purpose of their gear. I've always taken these things to be less about freeing anything and more about a) packing things up rather too snugly and b) showing off what there is to be proud of, including, but not restricted to, the thighs. I, needless to say, am very much a swimming shorts man. If you'd given the matter any thought, I hope you'd have reached this conclusion. Take any man, and it's clear which way they lean when it comes to swimwear. Ronaldo's a smuggler all day long. I'd be staggered if a single pair of swimming shorts had ever seen the inside of his wardrobe. Lionel Messi, on the other hand, shorts all the way. Have a Google of this and you'll see I'm right. There is, to be fair, the odd shot of Ronaldo in shorts, but only in ones tailored tight enough to suggest that some kind of smuggling operation is indeed under way. Messi, though, is 100% standard shorts, bless him. In politics I have our prime minister in shorts, as is only right and proper. The only male member of the cabinet I can see in smugglers is Hilary Benn, for some reason. Across the floor, I can imagine Robert Jenrick keeping him company. Nigel Farage, shorts. Lee Anderson, definitely smugglers. Feel free to play this game at home. On the radio I was enjoying myself no end with all this when a listener texted in alleging that in France, budgie smugglers are mandatory! How I laughed! But it's true. Jump into a public pool wearing shorts and you'll be hauled right back out. Hygiene reasons, apparently. I'd have thought that shorts, allowing a bit more freedom and ventilation, would be healthier. But the logic is that you might have been in shorts all day before getting in the pool, whereas you're unlikely, even in France, to have been a man about town in your contrebandiers de perruches. You may by now be wondering if my level of interest in all this is entirely healthy. Well, the truth is, I once had a hand in a budgie-smuggling operation – that is, the smuggling of an actual budgie. I'm not proud of it, but it's time to come clean. In mitigation, this was in the 1970s and I was but a child. Auntie Lily and Uncle Sid, Lily being my grandad's sister, had long lived in Perth, Australia. But now they decided to live out their days back in Birmingham. They brought with them a budgerigar called Timmy. Timmy was a most excellent budgie. He'd tilt his head in a sweet way when whistled to, say the odd word, and fly around the front room without crapping everywhere. They loved Timmy. We all loved Timmy. But Lily and Sid didn't love life back in Birmingham, so resolved to return to Perth. Disastrously though, the rules were such that Timmy wouldn't be allowed back into Australia. Disaster. Lily – pardon the slight pun – hatched a plan. She'd smuggle Timmy back to Oz in her handbag. The Timmy training commenced. Day by day we accustomed him to ever longer periods of handbag time which, being a prince among budgies, he soon got the hang of. During the flight Lily planned to feed him and let him out for a quick flap when she went to the toilet. Departure day dawned. The jeopardy was very real. If, God forbid, they were rumbled and Timmy was to be confiscated, Lily even had with her something with which to euthanise him. Quite where she sourced this budgie poison, I know not. But off they went on a flight that still feels like the longest flight I've ever taken, even though I wasn't on it. The wait was awful. Then a three-word telegram arrived: 'All is well.' Oh, the joy. And the three of them lived happily ever after. I am now bracing myself for letters about some ghastly avian health calamity that subsequently came to pass down under, with the finger pointing at our Timmy as budgie zero. Please let it not be so. If it is, as my penance, I'll wear nothing but budgie smugglers, in and out of the water, for the rest of my days. Do you have an opinion on the issues raised in this article? If you would like to submit a response of up to 300 words by email to be considered for publication in our letters section, please click here.

Jackson Warne reveals how his late father Shane inspired his surprise new career move: 'It's therapy for me'
Jackson Warne reveals how his late father Shane inspired his surprise new career move: 'It's therapy for me'

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