Ben Winch

Benjamin Roy Winch (born Adelaide, 1973) is an Australian writer and musician.

Brought up in the Adelaide Hills of South Australia, Winch performed in the alternative rock band Movement from 1990-92 before starting to write fiction.

His first novel Liadhen was shortlisted in the 1994 Angus and Robertson Bookworld First Novel Award,[1] and published by Wakefield Press in 1995. Although heralded as part of the first wave of the Australian Grunge Lit movement, Liadhen is in fact a dreamlike and non-realistic story set in a fictional town in the Australian Alps, and incorporating few of the traits of urban-based dirty realism that characterised that movement.[2]

Winch's next novel, My Boyfriend's Father (Wakefield Press, 1996), was closer to the grunge mould. A first-person narrative told by a young female, My Boyfriend's Father documents the break-up of a family owing to drug and alcohol abuse and was shortlisted in both the 1996 New South Wales Premier's Christina Stead Award for Fiction and the inaugural Kathleen Mitchell Award.[3] In 1996 Winch also appeared at Adelaide Writers' Week and became the youngest ever recipient of a Fellowship for Literature from the Australia Council for the Arts.[4]

In the winter of 1997 Winch moved to Tasmania to work on the multi-genre pulp triptych Vanishing Points, which emerged under a pseudonym via COQ & CO Books & Music in 2012.

In 2004 he returned to the Australian literary scene briefly via a spoken word/music collaboration with Adelaide poet Tim Sinclair entitled Brothers of the Head, a concept album about an unborn foetus trapped in his brother's skull.[5]

From 2004-6 he released short-run CDRs of improvisational rock and lo-fi via Cottage Industry Recordings.

In 2009 he moved to Manchester, England, where he formed the band Shadow History with ex-Icicle Works bassist Chris Layhe.

Winch now lives in northern New South Wales with his wife and her three sons.

Bibliography

References

  1. The Journal of Commonwealth Literature, Vol. 31, No. 3, 3-43 (1996)
  2. Kirsty Leishman, 'Australian grunge literature and the conflict between literary generations', Journal of Australian Studies, 23:63,94 — 102 (1999) / 'Lit Grit Invades Oz-Lit', Murray Waldren, Rolling Stone (1995)
  3. Jenny Lee, Meanjin / University of Melbourne
  4. The Australia Council
  5. National Library of Australia

External links

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