Mark Tredinnick won the Montreal International Poetry Prize in 2011 and the Cardiff International Poetry Prize in 2012. He has won in recent years, as well as the international prizes, a number of major Australian awards—
The Blake and
Newcastle Prizes, among them, and a Premier's Literature Prize (for Fire Diary). Along with his volumes of poetry—
Bluewren Cantos (2013),
Fire Diary (2010),
The Lyrebird (2011), and
The Road South (spoken word CD, 2008)— ''Tredinnick's thirteen books include the landscape memoir,
The Blue Plateau
(2009), four books on the writing craft, including
, The Little Red Writing Book
(2006), and Australian Love Poems,'' which he edited in 2013. A bilingual (Chinese/English) selection of his poems (
The Lyrebird) is due out late in 2014, along with his third collection of poems,
Body Copy. He is working on a memoir of a reading life, Reading Slowly at the End of Time (2015). Although he now writes mainly poetry, Tredinnick continues to write essays, criticism, reviews, and other prose, at his home outside Bowral. He wrote a lot of prose and published several prose books and hundreds of essays before his first poems were published in the early 2005. As well as poetry workshops, Tredinnick teaches literary journalism, creative writing, and creative nonfiction at the
University of Sydney, and he has three times been a judge of the
NSW Premier's Prize in the nonfiction category,
Douglas Stewart Prize. Tredinnick's work, The Blue Plateau, an extended lyric essay on the life of one place on earth, won the
Queensland Premier's Literary Award in 2010 and was shortlisted for the Prime Minister's Literary Award the same year. Tredinnick's poetry and essays are anthologised and published in journals, blogs and newspapers, in Australia and internationally and has appeared in journals including
Australian Book Review, Australian Poetry, Contrappasso,
Eureka Street, Island, Isotope, Magma, Mascara, Meanjin, New Welsh Review, Orion, PAN,
Poetry London,
The Scotsman, Southerly,
Wet Ink, The Wonderbook of Poetry, and
World Literature Today. For nearly twenty years, Tredinnick has taught and lectured poetry, creative nonfiction, grammar,
nature writing, and composition at universities (chiefly the University of Sydney). He has been a guest of many literary and poetry festivals around the world, including the Adelaide, Brisbane, Sydney, Perth, Oxford, and Ubud Festivals, and the Ottawa Poetry Festival (VerseFest). He has spent teaching residencies at the Universities of Alaska, Montana, Nebraska, Nevada, the University of Aberystwyth and the
University of Wales,
Trinity Saint David. In the
2020 Australia Day Honours Tredinnick was awarded the Medal of the
Order of Australia (OAM) for "service to literature, and to education". ==Life==