Popular Australian author pleads guilty over child exploitation material

One of Australia’s most celebrated contemporary authors, Craig Silvey, known globally for his award-winning children’s and young adult novels, has entered a guilty plea to two charges of possessing and distributing child exploitation material. The 43-year-old writer was first taken into custody in January this year, when Australian police executed a search warrant at his residential property in Perth, Western Australia. Investigators seized multiple electronic devices during the raid to build their case against the author.

During Tuesday’s court hearing, Silvey formally admitted guilt to two charges connected to child exploitation material allegedly created in January 2025. Prosecutors dropped two additional charges, one of which related to material said to have been produced in 2022. The author, who is a father of three children, had his existing bail conditions extended, and his next court appearance is scheduled for July 2025. Reporters waiting outside the Perth courthouse attempted to question Silvey, but he declined to make any public statement regarding the charges.

Silvey’s body of work has long been a staple of Australian literary culture and school curricula across the country. His 2009 coming-of-age novel *Jasper Jones*, which follows a 13-year-old boy navigating a small-town scandal, won multiple major Australian literary awards and was shortlisted for the prestigious International Dublin Literary Award. The critically acclaimed novel was adapted into a 2017 feature film starring Hollywood actors Toni Collette and Hugo Weaving. Another of Silvey’s fan-favorite works, 2022’s *Runt*, tells the story of an 11-year-old girl and her stray dog set against the backdrop of the Australian outback. That novel was adapted for the big screen in 2024, starring comedian Celeste Barber, and a stage production of the story in Sydney was put on an “indefinite hiatus” immediately after the author’s charges became public knowledge.

In the months following Silvey’s January arrest, major publishing houses, retail book chains, and educational institutions across Australia have moved swiftly to remove his works from circulation and curricula. Schools in both Western Australia and Victoria have pulled three of his best-known titles — *Jasper Jones*, *Runt*, and *Rhubarb* — from their approved teaching reading lists, while bookstores have cleared his works from their shelves.