Awards & Winners

Clive Barry

Date of Birth 02-September-1922
Place of Birth Manly
(New South Wales)
Nationality Australia
Also know as Clive Stephen Barry
Profession Novelist, Travel writer
Clive Stephen Barry was an Australian novelist and inaugural winner of the Guardian Fiction Prize, described by the Oxford Companion to Australian Literature as a "vivid stylist with a capacity for dry humour". At only sixteen years of age Barry served in World War II – falsifying his date of birth in order to enlist. He was mentioned in despatches and went missing in action before he was reported in the Sydney Morning Herald to be a POW in Italy. He escaped two years later and crawled barefoot, without food or water, over the Dolomites to Switzerland. His experiences inside the camp would directly influence his 1965 novel Crumb Borne. In 1961 he was appointed the United Nations representative in the Congo.

Awards by Clive Barry

Check all the awards nominated and won by Clive Barry.

1965


Guardian Fiction Prize
Honored for : Crumb Borne

Nominations 1965 »

Award Nominated Nominated Work
Guardian Fiction Prize Crumb Borne