First-ever wearing of my E Pluribus Hugo t-shirt and my Midamericon II staff shirt. For the pool party this afternoon.
First-ever wearing of my E Pluribus Hugo t-shirt and my Midamericon II staff shirt. For the pool party this afternoon.
Loncon 3 has announced they are doing retro Hugo awards for works that would have been eligible in 1939 (the Worldcon 75 years before theirs) (meaning works published in 1938).
Boy, 1938 was quite an exciting year. Looking just at novels, my eye is immediately captured by:
What is this thing with good authors not having first names, anyway?
(I don’t mean nothing else published that year is worth considering, either; just that those leaped out at me on an initial scan of this early list. All of those works are currently in print, and I believe have been in print continuously for 75 years; that’s an amazing achievement in literature.)
I believe we just missed The Hobbit by one year, too. It won’t get a chance, since there wasn’t a Worldcon the year it would have been eligible for a Hugo. Fantasy existed before 1965! Who knew?
Jo Walton won a well-deserved Hugo last night for her novel Among Others. Here she’s on stage during the photo session with other winners after the ceremony.
There’s been a little more outside notice of the Hugo award, its results, and its selection process in the last couple of years, or at least I’ve been seeing more of it since I read the LiveJournal of the chairman of the WSFS Mark Protection Committee (and rail-fan, and unit of measurement). Also I’ve been finding the award-winners (both Hugo and Nebula) less interesting over the years; I used to consider them very important, good guides to good reading. So I’ve been percolating some blather about the general subject area for a while. Continue reading Science Fiction Awards