“All my free time was being devoted to metabolising some of the ugliest things imaginable and that turned me – for a while – into quite a sad and cynical person.”
But all that gloom has proven worthwhile.Bodies of Light was published to enthusiastic reviews and has been named as winner of this year’s $60,000 Miles Franklin Literary Award,Australia’s most significant prize for fiction. No more darkness now:“It feels pretty bloody good,actually.” At 31,Down is one of the youngest winners of the prize and the sixth woman in a row to win.
Her novel was chosen froma shortlist that includedThe Other Half of Youby Michael Mohammed Ahmad,Scary Monstersby Michelle de Kretser,One Hundred Days by Alice Pung,andGrimmish by Michael Winkler,who each receive $5000. The judges said with extraordinary skill and compassion,Down had “written an important book which speaks to an urgent issue in contemporary Australian life”.
Bodies of Light grew out of twin obsessions – one with children in care and the other with people who decide to disappear.
“For a really long time I’ve been appalled with the way we as Australian society are prepared to ignore or neglect marginalised children and young people,in particular,” she says. “The way the welfare system fails young people is something I have thought about for years and this story is one way of telling that story.”
Some people have responded to the book with the view that too many bad things happen to one person,or the portrayal of growing up in care is too bleak,but Down says the fictional account of Maggie Sullivan’s life was grounded in the real world. “What I’d really like to see is for more people to understand this is very much the lived reality and very much an ongoing problem.”