Stone Sky Gold Mountain


Stone Sky Gold Mountain is a 2020 novel by Mirandi Riwoe. The novel follows two Chinese siblings, Ying and Lai Yue, who move to Maytown during the Australian gold rushes. The novel won the 2020 ARA Historical Novel Prize and the Fiction Book Award at the 2020 Queensland Literary Awards. It was described by the judging panel of the Stella Prize as "a lyrical, character-driven piece of historical fiction that explores identity, friendship, belonging, and what it means to exist on a land that is not your own".

Reception

The novel received generally positive reviews. In a review in The Saturday Paper, Cher Tan praised Riwoe's exploration of racism and misogyny in colonial Australia and her rich use of language, while noting that the novel's ending felt somewhat rushed. Mindy Gill likewise noted the novel's abrupt ending in a review for the Sydney Review of Books, but praised the novel for its compelling exploration of race and racial violence in early Australian history. Writing in Meanjin, Jinghua Qian wrote that the novel was a reminder of Chinese settlers' complicity in colonisation, but that its Aboriginal characters were not fully developed and that it occasionally slipped into "self-orientalising" tropes. Laura Elizabeth Woollett gave a positive review of the novel in Australian Book Review, writing that Riwoe "masterfully wields the interiority of marginalised characters to destabilise dominant colonial narratives".

Awards

YearAwardCategoryResult
2020ARA Historical Novel PrizeWon
2020Queensland Literary AwardsThe University of Queensland Fiction Book AwardWon
2020Queensland Literary AwardsQueensland Premier's Award for a Work of State Significance
2020Queensland Literary AwardsThe Courier-Mail People’s Choice Queensland Book of the Year Award
2021Stella Prize
2021Davitt AwardAdult Novel
2021Australian Book Industry AwardsSmall Publishers' Adult Book of the Year
2021Miles Franklin Literary Award
2021Voss Literary Prize