Her next two books were documentary collections, respectively concerning the first European women in the Port Jackson and Botany Bay settlements and Jean Lee, the last woman hanged in Australia.
Albiston's fourth book, The Fall, a collection of chained verse, was shortlisted for premiers' prizes in Victoria, New South Wales and Queensland.
Albiston's sixth collection, the sonnet according to 'm', won the 2010 New South Wales Premier's Prize and was runner-up in the Chief Minister's Award (Australian Capital Territory).
"This is not a book of high mathematics: rather an attempt to migrate some of the innate robustness, austerity and elegance of Euclidean thought into the realm of poetic structure".
A collection of found poems based on the letters and postcards from WWI Victorian soldiers, Warlines was written on a State Library of Victoria Fellowship.
[E]lement: the atomic weight & radius of love extends Albiston's longstanding conversation with mathematics and poetic form into the realm of science.
"Using chemistry as a trope, Albiston tabulates the human predicament of love: its foundations and fundamentals; its configuration of emotions; its recurring properties; and its assumption of elements yet to be defined."
Critical analyses of her work can be found in publications such as Axon, Biography (US), Feeding the Ghost: Criticism on Contemporary Australian Poetry, Truth and Beauty: Verse Biography in Canada, Australia and New Zealand (NZ), Reclaiming Romanticism: Towards an Ecopoetics of Decolonization (UK), Humanities for the Environment: Integrating knowledge, forging new constellations of practice (UK) and Westerly.