Their second book, the poetry collection Comfort Food, was published in 2016. One of van Neerven's stories, Confidence Game, was featured in SBS podcast series and True Stories in 2015.[10]
Throat (2020) is van Neerven's second collection of poems, and consists of five themed chapters:[2] "The haunt-walk in"; "Whiteness is always approaching"; "I can't wait to meet my future genders"; "Speaking outside"; and " Take me to the back of my throat".[11][12]Throat won three prizes at the New South Wales Premier's Literary Awards: Book of the Year; the Kenneth Slessor Prize for Poetry; and the Multicultural NSW Award.[2]
Van Neerven published a piece in Griffith Review about sport, entitled "No Limits", in September 2021.[14] Described as "part creative memoir, part reportage, part theoretical essay and part history lesson", the piece examines the exclusionary nature of sport, which leads to a very low rate of participation by non-binary people.[15]
In June 2024, text from two of van Neerven's works, titled Shoutlines and yaburuhma dugun (infinite sky) were shown on the Federation Square Big Screen, presented as part of 'The Blak Infinite' program at the 2024 RISING: festival in Melbourne.[16]
Van Neerven is co-host and creative producer of two podcasts,[6]Extraordinary Voices for Extraordinary Times, launched in June 2020,[19] and Between the Leaves, launched in October 2020.[20][21]
Awards and honours
Van Neerven was a recipient of a Sidney Myer Creative Fellowship, an award of A$160,000 given to mid-career creatives and thought leaders.[22]
2013: Queensland Literary Awards — The David Unaipon Award for Unpublished Indigenous Writers for Heat and Light
2017: The poem "Mango" from van Neerven's collection Comfort Food (2016) was chosen as a sample text in the English Paper 1 examination of the New South Wales Higher School Certificate[25]
2024: Queensland Literary Awards — Queensland Premier's Award for a Work of State Significance and the Nonfiction Book Award, shortlisted for Personal Score[34]
—— (2023). Personal Score: Sport, Culture, Identity.
As editor
Writing Black: New Indigenous Writing from Australia, edited by Ellen van Neerven, State Library of Queensland (2014)
Joiner Bay and Other Stories, edited by Ellen van Neerven, Margaret River Press (2017)
Homeland Calling: Words from a new generation of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Voices, edited by Ellen van Neerven, Desert Pea Media via Hardie Grant Publishing (2020)[39]