Wright has published four novels, one biography, and several works of nonfiction. Her work also appears in anthologies and journals.
Origin and activism
Wright is a land rights activist from the Waanyi nation in the highlands of the southern Gulf of Carpentaria. Her father, a white cattleman, died when she was five years old and she grew up in Cloncurry, Queensland, with her mother and grandmother.[7]
Wright's first book, the novel Plains of Promise, published in 1997, was nominated for several literary awards.[9]
Wright is also the author of non-fiction works. Take Power, on the history of the land rights movement, was published in 1998, and Grog War (Magabala Books) on the introduction of alcohol restrictions in Tennant Creek, published in 1997.[10]
Also in 2013, Wright's third novel, The Swan Book, was published. The book delves into the cultural and racial political challenges facing Australia's Indigenous peoples.[19] It was shortlisted for the 2014 Victorian Premier's Literary Award for Indigenous Writing.[20]
Wright's book, Tracker, her tribute to the central Australian economist Tracker Tilmouth, was published by Giramondo in 2017. A biographical work variously characterized as unconventional[22] and complicated,[23]Tracker won the 2018 Stella Prize.[24] In the words of Ben Etherington: "It is a work, epic in scope and size, that will ensure that a legend of Central Australian politics is preserved in myth."[25] She was awarded the 2018 Magarey Medal for Biography for Tracker.[26]Tracker also won the 2018 University of Queensland Non-Fiction Book Award at the Queensland Literary Awards.[27] and was shortlisted for the New South Wales Premier's Literary Awards, Douglas Stewart Prize for Non-Fiction 2019.[28] Wright was on the program for four events at the 2017 Brisbane Writers Festival in Brisbane, Queensland, Australia.[29]
In 2018, Wright conducted another storytelling collaboration, this time with the Gangalidda leader and activist Clarence Walden in Doomadgee, Northern Queensland. Her work with Walden led to two feature documentaries, Nothing but the Truth, a radio feature that broadcast on the Awaye! program on ABC Radio National in June 2019,[30] and Straight from the Heart, a screen documentary that premiered at World Literature and the Global South in August 2019.[31]
She received the Creative Australia Award for Lifetime Achievement in Literature in 2023[37] and was awarded the Melbourne Prize for Literature in 2024.[38]
She is a member of the Australian Research Council research project "Other Worlds: Forms of World Literature".[40] Building on her success with Tracker, her theme for the project focuses on forms of Aboriginal oral storytelling.[41]
In 2017, Wright was named the Boisbouvier Chair in Australian Literature at the University of Melbourne.[42]
Take Power, Like This Old Man Here: An anthology of writings celebrating twenty years of land rights in Central Australia, 1977–1997 (IAD, 1998). ISBN1-86465-005-2