The Furphy Literary Award – 2025 Winner announced

 

 

WINNER OF 2025 FURPHY LITERARY AWARD ANNOUNCED

 

Shortlisted writers, judges, special guests, FLA alumni, and members of the Furphy family gathered at Shepparton Art Museum in Shepparton, Victoria, on Saturday 26 July to find out who would be named the winner of the 2025 Furphy Literary Award (FLA), one of the richest short story competitions in Australia. The Award continues to grow in popularity and prestige, evidenced by the number and quality of entries received.

 

The judges were extremely busy this year, working through the impressive 788 entries that were submitted. The number of entries was the second highest recorded in the Award’s six-year history, since the 2020 expansion into a national competition. The judging panel – Anson Cameron, John Harms, Margaret Hickey, Stephanie Holt, John Kerr and Thornton McCamish – revealed the longlist of 84 on June 30 and the shortlist of 16 on July 4.

 

Serena Moss, a startling talent brand new to writing competitions, is this year’s Furphy Literary Award winner for her entry ‘The Eulogy Business’. Serena receives $15,000and publication in The Furphy Anthology 2025 (out in late November), along with the other 15 shortlisted stories.

 

 

‘The Eulogy Business’ is about a person who makes their living writing eulogies, advertising on Gumtree under ‘creative services’ [Need a Eulogy? Ghostwriter Available. No Judgment. Quick Turnaround. Reasonable Rates] but most of the jobs come through word of mouth. The story is written in taut, spare sentences, and right from the start, demands your attention:

 

The first time I made someone cry for money, I was twenty-two and hungover, sitting cross-legged on my mum’s laundry tiles with a Bic pen and a half-eaten sausage roll. It was a eulogy for a man I’d never met – a butcher named Stan with gout, three daughters, and an “infectious laugh.” I wrote it in twenty minutes and charged two hundred bucks.

 

FLA judge Anson Cameron had this to say about the winning entry: “Your hope when you’re reading a story entered into a competition like this is that you’ll eventually hear a voice, a new voice, a voice both profound and hilarious, a true voice that makes you listen wholeheartedly and joyously, a voice that might become a name … a name in Australian literature. The judges heard that voice while reading this story.”

 

2025 Furphy Literary Award winner Serena Moss writes fiction that lives between the sacred and the everyday — usually about men who don’t talk, and the people who wish they would. Her work explores themes of grief, memory, and the quiet complexities of Australian life.

 

A voracious reader, aspiring author, and lifelong scribbler, Serena was shortlisted for the 2025 Fogarty Literary Award, offered by Fremantle Press, for her debut novel Wreckage.  Currently living in Geraldton where she works in real estate, Serena spent her childhood between Perth and a handful of tiny WA towns.

 

Click here to read Serena’s winning story ‘The Eulogy Business’

 

Serena Moss joins an esteemed list of previous FLA winners: Kathryn Lomer (2024), Jen Rewell (2023), Cate Kennedy (2022), Thomas Alan (2021) and Ruby Todd (2020).

 

Reporting on the judging process on behalf of the judges, John Harms said “What struck us this year was the variety in the wonderful stories we received. They really have depicted Australian life in its diversity. It’s intriguing to read the bios that the authors submit with their stories – bios which only become available when names are revealed after the judging process has been completed. They come from the length and breadth of the country, are of all ages, are clearly diverse in their cultural backgrounds, and their day-to-day lives cover many occupations. It’s no wonder we enjoy the process.”

 

Runner up ($3,000 plus publication in The Furphy Anthology 2025) was Charlotte Askew for ‘Somewhere Above the Artesian’. Charlotte is another young writer on this rise, she is the 2024 Rose Fellow at Texas State University where she is currently completing an MFA (Master of Fine Arts) in Creative Writing.

 

“There’s a mystery here, we are never quite sure of what is unfolding in the minds of the narrators, but as the highway stretches on, as we travel further above the Artesian, the reader’s anxiety increases to boiling point, relieved only by the devastating conclusion. This story, as the boy in the story suggests, is ‘all about pressure and release.’ Wonderful!” Margaret Hickey, FLA Judge

 

And in third place ($2,000 plus publication in The Furphy Anthology 2025) was ‘All the Moments I Still Live In’ by Amy Montague. Amy is a Melbourne-based writer of Maltese-Australian background whose creative work explores memory, identity, and the way everyday experiences shape our lives.

 

“The author of ‘All the Moments I Still Live In’ opens by taking us straight into main character Maria’s now; her present; and then – almost imperceptibly – into moments Maria still lives in. ‘Imperceptibly’ can be a sin in a writer, a negation of duty to a reader. The author’s handling of this is masterful.” John Kerr, FLA Judge

 

Furphy Literary Award (FLA) Director Sam Furphy said, “The Furphy Literary Award is more than a competition—it’s a celebration of Australian storytelling and a commitment to nurturing writers at every stage of their journey. It was inspiring to have so many shortlisted writers in attendance on Saturday night, and especially heartening to witness the energy and promise of the emerging younger writers who submitted stories and swept the top three spots this year!”

 

2025 Furphy Literary Award Winners & Shortlisted Writers:

1st: Serena Moss – ‘The Eulogy Business’

2nd: Charlotte Askew – ‘Somewhere Above the Artesian’

3rd: Amy Montague – ‘All the Moments I Still Live In’

 

Click here to see the 2025 Short List and Long List.

 

2025 Junior and Youth Category Winners         

 

Short stories and poems written by young people in the Goulburn Valley have also been judged and this year’s Junior and Youth winners will be announced on Sunday 27th July at an event at Shepparton Library. Check the FLA website for these results, and to read the talented winning entries in each category.

 

Supporting Australian short story writing: The Furphy Literary Award & Furphy Anthology

 

 

Named in honour of Australian writer Joseph Furphy, the Furphy Literary Award celebrates Australian story telling in the short story format. Joseph Furphy was the author of a number of works written under the pen name Tom Collins – the most famous of which was Such is Life, published in 1903.

 

The Furphy Literary Award is a national competition that is free to enter. Since 2020, an annual hardback Anthology of the top 16 stories of each year has been published. Known for its bold and eye-catching design, the Anthology is published by Hardie Grant. The Furphy Anthology 2023 won the Best Designed Literary Fiction/Poetry Cover at the 2024 APA Book Design Awards.

 

The FLA Open category is for short stories of 5000 words or less, with total prize money of $20,000. Entrants must either reside in Australia or, if overseas, be citizens of Australia. The ongoing theme for the Award is ‘Australian Life in all its Diversity’.

 

 

  

Comments

  1. Dips O'Donnell says

    Congratulations to Serena. As big a character as those in her stories.
    We’ll be hearing more from her – I promise!
    A bright light on Australia’s literary landscape.

  2. Emma Westwood says

    It’s a ripper story – such a worthy winner!
    Great to meet Serena and ‘furphies’ far snd wide at the Shep event. Including a long-overdue reunion with Dips, e.regnans and JTH!

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