The 2015 Hugo Awards
Well, it seems that science fiction fandom has rejected the Sad Puppies and the Rabid Puppies wholesale.
Well, it seems that science fiction fandom has rejected the Sad Puppies and the Rabid Puppies wholesale.
For many years, the Hugo Awards have been a well-respected industry award for some of the best science fiction stories. Originally dominated by white men, the Hugos have realized that there is a much wider audience for science fiction with vastly different perspectives and have begun including those authors. The variety and quality of works recently are, in my opinion, the true golden age of science fiction.
Numerous times when I’ve been looking for a new book to read, I would just go to the Hugo Award winners or nominees for the past couple years and pick something out. It’s how I discovered Ann Leckie’s Ancillary Sword and Paolo Bacigalupi’s The Windup Girl, among others. I’m currently reading (very slowly, I might add) The Hugo Winners Volumes I and II, which collects the Novella, Novelette and Short Story winners from 1955 to 1970. There are many titans of the science fiction world collected in that book: Arthur C. Clarke, Harlan Ellison, Ursula K. Le Guin, Fritz Leiber, Poul Anderson, and others. In short, the Hugos meant something. Until this year.
FURIOUSLY REASONABLE
Smuggling Since 2007 | Reviewing SF & YA since 2008
content creation in pgh & www
Life, Home, Money, Fashion and Everything else as a Family of 4
Two southern scientistas will be bringing you all that is awesome in STEM as we complete our PhDs. Ecology, statistics, sass.
A Kindergarten Teaching Blog
A blog about the family I’ve chosen, the family I created, and my adventures along the way.
The latest news on WordPress.com and the WordPress community.
Putting the "omic" into comical....
The intersection of physics, optics, history and pulp fiction
Cultivating Detroit's literary community
The History Behind The Story
Famous, Infamous and Iconic Photos
private thoughts of a physicist and chessplayer
the sky is no longer the limit
Aquatic entomologist with a blogging habit
Experiences and reflections of a Missouri entomologist
Adventures in natural history collections
Current News in Mortuary Archaeology and Bioarchaeology