Article · Wikipedia archive · Last revised Jul 18, 2026

Craig Cormick

Craig Cormick is an Australian science communicator and author. He was born in Wollongong in 1961, and is known for his creative writing and social research into public attitudes towards new technologies. He has lived mainly in Canberra, but has also lived in Iceland (1980–81) and Finland (1984–85). He has published over 40 books of fiction and non-fiction. He has been active in the Canberra writing community, teaching and editing, was Chair of the ACT Writers Centre from 2003 to 2008 and in 2006 was Writer in Residence at the Universiti Sains Malaysia in Penang, Malaysia.

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Craig Cormick

Cormick with his book, Time Vandals, in 2012
Cormick with his book, Time Vandals, in 2012
Born1961 (age 64–65)
OccupationScience communicator and author
Notable awardsACT Literary Awards – Overall Book Award 2021, winner

Craig Cormick is an Australian science communicator and author. He was born in Wollongong in 1961,1 and is known for his creative writing and social research into public attitudes towards new technologies. He has lived mainly in Canberra, but has also lived in Iceland (1980–81) and Finland (1984–85). He has published over 40 books of fiction and non-fiction. He has been active in the Canberra writing community, teaching and editing, was Chair of the ACT Writers Centre from 2003 to 2008 and in 2006 was Writer in Residence at the Universiti Sains Malaysia in Penang, Malaysia.

In 2025 his co-written book Warra Warra Wai won the NSW Premiers History Awards, was shortlisted for the Prime Minister's Literary Awards, and was shortlisted in two categories for the Queensland Literary Awards.

Cormick's creative writing has appeared in Southerly, Westerly, Island Magazine, Meanjin, The Phoenix Review, Overland, Scarp, 4W, Redoubt, Block, as well as in overseas publications including Silverfish New Writing (Malaysia) and Foreign Literature No 6 (China). He has previously been an editor of the radical arts magazine Blast, and his writing awards include the ACT Book of the Year Award in 19992 a Queensland Premier's Literary Award in 2006, a Victorian Community History Award in 2015, the ACT Writing and Publishing Award in 2015 and the Tasmanian Writers' Prize in 2016.

As a science communicator he has worked for the CSIRO, Questacon and the Department of Industry, Science, Energy and Resources, and has represented the Australian Government at many international science forums including APEC and OECD conferences, presenting on issues relating to public concerns about new technologies. In 2013 he was awarded the Unsung Hero of Science Communications by the Australian Science Communicators. Since 2019 he has been serving on the Advisory Board on Education and Outreach to the Nobel Prize Winning Organisation for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons.

Cormick was awarded the Medal of the Order of Australia (OAM) in the 2021 Queen's Birthday Honours "service to science, and to the community".3

Literary career

Craig Cormick studied journalism and creative writing at the University of Canberra, with stints at the Canberra School of Art, the University of Iceland and Helsinki University. He returned to the University of Canberra to study languages, public relations and sociology, undertake a Masters in Communications and then completed a PhD in Creative Communications at Deakin University in 2007.

His first books were self-published or picked up by small presses until Unwritten Histories was published by Aboriginal Studies Press in 1998. The book subsequently won the ACT Book of the Year Award. His work has a strong sense of satire, across themes that include exploration, isolation, duality and Ned Kelly (who appears at least once in each of his eight short story collections). He has written and published, on average, one book a year since 1998, including collections of short fiction, novels and non-fiction.

He has published scholarly articles on public attitudes to new technologies in publications including: NanoEthics, the International Journal of Biotechnology4 Agricultural Science, Historia Ciencias Saude5 (Brazil) and Choices (USA). He also authored the Australian Government reports, Cloning Goes to the Movies, and What you really need to know about what the public really thinks about GM foods.

In 2008 he fulfilled "a life's dream"6 and travelled to Antarctica as an Antarctic Arts Fellow, visiting the three Australian stations on the continent, Casey, Davis and Mawson, publishing his experiences as In Bed with Douglas Mawson: Travels around Antarctica, in 2011, which merges his two interests of science and creative writing. He has also published one of the few research papers ever on nudity in Antarctica.7

In 2014 and 2015 he published the acclaimed the Shadow Master series with Angry Robot books, in the US and UK, as was a guest author at the Convergence fan convention in Minneapolis, and at WorldCon in Helsinki in 2018. In 2015 he also took part in the Yale Writers Conference.

Post-Covid he has embarked on several research journeys into First Nations histories and in 2024 published, along with First Nations author Darren Rix, Warra Warra Wai: How Indigenous Australians discovered Captain Cook, and what they tell of the coming of the Ghost People.

Writing awards

  • 2019 - Winner of the ACT Writing and Publishing Awards - non-fiction, for Backseat Drivers, 2018.8
  • 2019 - Shortlisted for an Aurealis Award for Best Horror Book for Years of the Wolf, 2018.9
  • 2020 – Winner of the Roly Sussex Short Story Prize for the "Lost Journal of Edmund Kennedy".10
  • 2022 - Winner of the Special Book Award from 2020 as a part of the ACT Notable Awards 2022 for On A Barbarous Coast.11
  • 2023 - Commendation in the Victorian Community History Awards - A Darker Shade of Moonlite.12
  • 2024 - Winner ACT Literary Awards Warra Warra Wai.13
  • 2024 - Winner Canberra Critics Circle Warra Warra Wai.13
  • 2025 - Winner Lane Cover Short Story Competition for 'The Names of those Lost'
  • 2025 - Winner NSW Premier's History Award Warra Warra Wai.13
  • 2025 - WinnerACT Book of the Year Award Warra Warra Wai.13
  • 2025 - Prime Minister's Literary Awards shortlisting Warra Warra Wai.13

Works

Books published

Books edited

Academic publications

References

References

External links