David Malouf (born March 20, 1934, Brisbane, Queensland, Australia) is an Australian poet and novelist of Lebanese and English descent whose work reflects his ethnic background as well as his Queensland childhood and youth.
Malouf received a B.A. with honours from the University of Queensland in 1954. He lived and worked in Europe from 1959 to 1968, then taught English at the University of Sydney until 1977. After 1977 he became a full-time writer, dividing his time between Australia and Italy.
Malouf’s volumes of poetry include Bicycle and Other Poems (1970; also published as The Year of the Foxes and Other Poems), Neighbours in a Thicket (1974), Wild Lemons (1980), First Things Last (1980), Typewriter Music (2007), and Earth Hour (2014). Malouf also wrote the libretto for Richard Meale’s opera Voss (1986), based on the novel of the same name by Patrick White.
Malouf’s first novel was the autobiographical Johnno (1975), set in Brisbane during World War II. An Imaginary Life (1978) re-creates the final years of the Roman poet Ovid. Child’s Play (1981) concerns the metaphysical relationship between a professional assassin and his intended victim. The novella Fly Away Peter (1982) is set in Queensland just before World War I. The Great World (1990), about POWs in World War II, won the Commonwealth Writers’ Prize (now Commonwealth Book Prize). Malouf’s other novels include Harland’s Half Acre (1984), Remembering Babylon (1993), and Conversations at Curlow Creek (1996). Ransom (2009) is a retelling of the Iliad by Homer.
In 1998, as part of the annual Boyer Lecture Series presented on radio by the Australian Broadcasting Corporation, Malouf gave six radio talks on “A Spirit of Play: The Making of Australian Consciousness”; these were published the same year as A Spirit of Play. Among his collections of short stories are Antipodes (1985), Untold Tales (1999), Dream Stuff (2000), and Every Move You Make (2006). Malouf also wrote a collection of autobiographical essays called 12 Edmondstone Street (1985). His numerous honours include the Neustadt Prize (2000).