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Journalism award
The Walkley Book Award is an Australian award presented annually by the
Walkley Foundation for excellence in long-form journalism and nonfiction, with subjects ranging from biography to true crime to investigative journalism and reporting.
[1]
[2]
Winners
2005:
Bob Connolly , Making Black Harvest
[3]
2006: Neil Chenoweth, Packer's Lunch: A Rollicking Tale of Swiss Bank Accounts and Money-Making
[4]
2007:
Chris Masters , Jonestown: The Power and the Myth of Alan Jones
[5]
2008:
Don Watson , American Journeys
[6]
2009:
Graham Freudenberg , Churchill and Australia
[7]
2010: Shirley Shackleton, The Circle of Silence: A Personal Testimony Before, During and After Balibo
[8]
2011: Russell Skelton, King Brown Country: The Betrayal of Papunya
[9]
2012:
George Megalogenis ,
The Australian Moment: How We Were Made For These Times
[10]
2013:
Pamela Williams , Killing Fairfax: Packer, Murdoch and the Ultimate Revenge
[11]
2014:
Paul Kelly , Triumph and Demise: The Broken Promise of a Labor Generation
[12]
2015:
Chip Le Grand , The Straight Dope: The Inside Story of Sport's Biggest Drug Scandal
[13]
2016:
Stan Grant , Talking To My Country
[3]
2017:
Louise Milligan , Cardinal: The Rise and Fall of
George Pell
[14]
2018: Helen Pitt, The House: The dramatic story of the
Sydney Opera House and the people who made it
[15]
2019:
Leigh Sales , Any Ordinary Day : Blindsides, Resilience and What Happens After the Worst Day of Your Life
[16]
2020: Lucie Morris-Marr, Fallen: The inside story of the secret trial and conviction of
Cardinal George Pell
[17]
2021: Kate Holden, The Winter Road
[18]
2022: Bronwyn Adcock, Currowan: The story of a fire and a community during Australia’s worst summer
[19]
2023:
Antony Loewenstein , The Palestine Laboratory: How Israel exports the technology of occupation around the world
[20]
References