Share this @internewscast.com
Brisbane writer Siang Lu has won the Miles Franklin Literary Award for his comical novel Ghost Cities, after more than 200 publishers rejected the manuscript.
And the 39-year-old author isn’t joking when he says he was shocked to find out he had won the $60,000 prize after being shortlisted for the first time.
“I just sat down and actually lost all feeling in my hands and legs, and I lost my voice,” he said.
“It was one of the first times in my life where I actually had to ask someone with complete seriousness, to just tell me that I wasn’t dreaming.”
Australia’s most prestigious literary award was announced at a ceremony in Sydney on Thursday night, at which Lu revealed that he finished the manuscript for Ghost Cities a decade ago in 2015, but it was rejected more than 200 times by publishers in Australia and overseas.

“I used to print my rejections and Blu-Tack them on the glass pane between my office, and my bedroom. My youngest child, Madeleine, had just been born — she is nine now — and she would nap on that big bed while I worked and kept an eye on her,” he said in his acceptance speech.

A man speaking at a podium into a microphone. On a screen behind him, a book called "Ghost Cities" is displayed.

Siang Lu accepted the $60,000 prize at an event in Sydney on Thursday night. Source: AAP / Jane Dempster

“The rejections kept piling up. Eventually, they grew so numerous that I could no longer see through the glass, into the bedroom where my daughter slept.”

Having finally been published by University of Queensland Press, the winning book has been described by critics as both intellectually ambitious and zany, and by the Miles Franklin judges as a “genuine landmark” in Australian literature.
“Siang Lu’s Ghost Cities is at once a grand farce and a haunting meditation on diaspora. Sitting within a tradition in Australian writing that explores failed expatriation and cultural fraud, Lu’s novel is also something strikingly new,” the judges said.
“Shimmering with satire and wisdom, and with an absurdist bravura, Ghost Cities is a genuine landmark in Australian literature.”
Lu says his win changes things dramatically — not only financially, but in terms of recognition for the quality of his work.

Ghost Cities was inspired by megacities built in China during the nation’s real estate boom, many of which have been left uninhabited and falling into ruin.

A man holding an award frame and smiling.

The manuscript for Ghost Cities was completed in 2015, but rejected more than 200 times by publishers in Australia and overseas. Source: AAP / Jane Dempster

It weaves together multiple stories — including that of a young man who is fired from his job as a translator at the Chinese consulate in Sydney, when it is discovered he is monolingual and has been relying on Google Translate.

There’s also a chess automaton with a secret, and an ancient emperor who creates a thousand replicas of himself.
Since his novel hit the shelves in 2024, Lu has found what he describes as a perverse joy in chatting to his readers, as they try to guess what Ghost Cities is actually saying.
The answer is less complex than readers might imagine: “It is trying to be funny,” he promises.
Siang Lu’s debut novel was 2022’s The Whitewash, while his online tracking project The Beige Index — described as “the Bechdel Test for race” in the film industry — has found an audience worldwide.
The 2025 shortlist was dominated by writers of colour, including veteran Brian Castro, who has made the shortlist four times, and two-time winner Michelle de Kretser.
The six authors shortlisted for the Miles Franklin also receive $5,000 from the Copyright Agency’s Cultural Fund.

Share this @internewscast.com
You May Also Like
Belgian traveller Céline Cremer.

Heartbreaking Discovery: DNA Confirms Missing Backpacker’s Fate

Following the announcement by police today that the remains have been “provisionally…
International Atomic Energy Agency flag

UN Nuclear Agency Faces Challenges in Confirming Iran’s Uranium Enrichment Status

Iran has not allowed the United Nations nuclear agency access to its…

Sussan Ley Announces Departure from Parliament, Celebrates Leadership Achievements

After representing her New South Wales electorate for a quarter of a…
General view of Yallourn Power Station (Luis Enrique Ascui/Australian Financial Review)

Firefighters Combat Intense Blaze for Five Hours at Victorian Power Station

Firefighters have spent nearly five hours battling to control a blaze inside…

Hillary Clinton Denies Any Memory of Meeting Jeffrey Epstein

In Brief Former US secretary of state Hillary Clinton has spoken at…
A cargo plane carrying money crashed near Bolivia's capital leaving at least 15 people dead.

Tragic Bolivian Cargo Plane Crash Claims 15 Lives, Devastating Loss of Money on Board

A cargo plane carrying money crashed near Bolivia’s capital killing at least…

Australia’s Financial Crisis: Breaking Records and Impacting Lives in 2023

Key Points Investment firm collapses, superannuation issues and misleading advice were major…
Bill Clinton

Bill Clinton Denies Wrongdoing in Intense Epstein Questioning

Former US President Bill Clinton told members of Congress on Friday that…
Will Jacks starred with both bat and ball as England beat New Zealand at the T20 World Cup

England’s T20 World Cup Triumph: Navigating Imperfections and Testing Fate with New Zealand Victory

Throughout the Twenty20 World Cup, England has persistently pursued the elusive “perfect…
Jacqueline Schmidt Aravena, pictured with her sister at their Melbourne home.

Melbourne Woman Fights to Stop Disabled Sister’s Imminent Deportation

The sister of a woman with cerebral palsy, who is on the…
Babawru Akuntsu, top, rests beside Akyp, her newborn son

Miraculous Birth Revives Endangered Amazonian Tribe: A New Dawn for Survival

Pugapia and her daughters, Aiga and Babawru, have long been the last…

Shocking Arrest of Larrakia Elder Amid Heated NT Administrator Protests: Uncover the Controversy

On Friday morning, a significant gathering of protesters convened in a park…