Alison Croggon
"We are all mistaken sometimes; sometimes we do wrong things, things that have bad consequences. But it does not mean we are evil, or that we cannot be trusted ever afterward."
The Gift, the first book in Alison's acclaimed young adult fantasy series The Books of Pellinor, was shortlisted for two Aurealis Awards for Excellence in Australian Speculative Fiction and named a 2003 CBCA Notable Book. The series has since been released to critical acclaim in the US, the UK and Germany. Alison is a Melbourne theatre critic for The Australian, and keeps a respected blog of theatre criticism, Theatre Notes. She is married to playwright Daniel Keene, lives in Melbourne and has three children.
What genres does Alison Croggon write in?
She writes across genres: young-adult fantasy (The Books of Pellinor), poetry, novellas and plays, and works as a theatre critic.
What is the recommended reading order for the Pellinor novels?
Read The Gift (Pellinor: Book 1), then The Riddle (Book 2), The Crow (Book 3) and The Singing (Book 4). The Bone Queen is a prequel and can be read before or after the main series.
Where should I start if I'm new to her work?
For YA fantasy start with The Gift (first in The Books of Pellinor). For her poetry try This Is the Stone or The Blue Gate; her novella Navigation is also notable.
What awards and recognitions has she received?
This Is the Stone won the 1991 Anne Elder and Dame Mary Gilmore Prizes; Navigation was highly commended in the 1995 Australian/Vogel awards; The Blue Gate and Attempts at Being were shortlisted for major poetry prizes; The Gift was shortlisted for two Aurealis Awards and named a 2003 CBCA Notable Book.
What themes or qualities are common in her work?
Her work spans poetic and dramatic writing and YA fantasy, often engaging moral complexity and consequence (as reflected in her quoted line about mistake and trust), alongside strong literary and theatrical sensibilities.






