This Year's Hugo Nominees Chosen
wrinkledshirt writes "They've announced this year's nominees for the Hugo Awards. Wonder who the next Asimov, Brin, Gibson or [shudder] Rowling is going to be? Find out at Conjose."
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This is very worrying - I recognise just two names on those lists. Ursula LeGuin and Vernor Vinge. .)
The ones I knew are dying off (Zelazny, Herbert, Asimov, Heinlein . .
Mielipiteet omiani - Opinions personal, facts suspect.
Anyways, Harry Potter is very entertaining, despite its main-stream nature. One can hardly argue that the books are for childeren due to the use of Magic and Witchcraft. These are clearly meant for adults, although i would let, and I understand why childeren love them so much.
Bringing irony to the Slash-masses
She's a good author. An experience reader can easily see that, hell her coninuing plots are better then any ST episode. I figure
A)wrinkled shirt never read any and is trying to be cool, or
B)Did read it, but is in such need of attention that going againse popular things is his equivelant of waving his arms in the air and going "look at me".
Jusat because you don't like a book, doesn't mean its not a good book, and just because a book is geared to someone young, doesn't mean its not a good book.
You may not like them, but they are technically sound. by that I mean structure, continuity, plot.
The Hobbit was written for children.
The Kruger Dunning explains most post on
I can't see CowboyNeal on the list!
Anyway we can put him in? Definately one of the best . What an unfortunate departure.. our hearts will always be with Adams.
geek page at KY speaks
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Cosmonaut Keep by Ken MacLeod (Orbit (UK)(2000); Tor)
Curiously enough, Slashdot is actually mentioned in this book. Has a nice scene with a bunch of old-time linux hacks sitting in a bar talking 'bout the good ol days. If you can handle non-linear storytelling, pop-culture references, and Scottish pessimistic pride in your sci-fi, I highly recommend Ken MacLeod. Plus, the cover art is usually pretty cool.
---- El diablo esta en mis pantalones! Mire, mire!
One can hardly argue that the books are for childeren due to the use of Magic and Witchcraft.
Yeah. Kids shouldn't read fantasy books or play fantasy games or watch fantasy movies - ever! Might damage their fragile little minds.
Instead, every child should go through weekly viewings of Pulp Fiction and Fight Club, and also read the Fight Club novel no less than once a month.
Haven't heard any of these except for Vinge (and I haven't read that book) and LeGuinn and I only remember seeing a couple of her books in like middle school...
I have loved Dr. Vinge's books that I have read, very provacative, he doesn't try to explain his universes, just sets down a series of rules and follows them... That is cool.
Now I just need to attend one of his classes here in San Diego if he is still teaching
* New website didn't know about
* A bunch of writers that other people like that I haven't been exposed to yet
Time to head down to the speciality SF bookshop tommorow and check them out (Galaxy, in Sydney Aus)
The biggest problem of Fantasy / Science Fiction at the moment is that people find one writer / style and refuse to read outside it. At it's worst these leads to Bookracks of Star Wars, Star Trek and other licensed works, while new authors cannot get into the 30-foot space that's reserved for "authors that perform"
Don't complain that you don't know the authors, just think of them as favorite authors you don't know about yet.
One can hardly argue that the books are for childeren due to the use of Magic and Witchcraft.
The next thing you know, someone will be claiming that Halloween is for children. Oh yeah, it is.
Are you one of those born-again Christian nut cases that claim that these stories teach children satanism and that witchcraft is real? If so, please grow up and join the rest of us in the 21st century. If you actually believe in witchcraft, satan, and all of that other occult stupidity, I pity you.
Gaiman is one of the world's most artistic storytellers. The way he brings together world religions creates a world of amazing depth. There are extra chapters in this particular book that do nothing to advance the plot line, but everything to increase the depth. It is an intensely satisfying read.
Gaiman's most successful project to date are the Sandman comics. Reading American Gods, you can tell that he used to work with comics. When Gaiman wrote the Sandman series, he didn't just write the dialogue, he wrote out long descriptions of each frame for the artist. In the same way, Gaiman creates a very visual picture for the reader in every scene. Although American Gods is horror by genre, every scene is beautiful because of Gaiman's description.
You may also know the book he co-authored with Terry Pratchett - Good Omens.
This is Slashdot! Why are you waiting for the dead tree edition? The no-evil-DMCA-protections WebScription edition is already fully available (and loaded into my Palm V...).
I read a fair amount of SF and try to keep up with the latest scribes. I'm pleased to see so many names I recognize, but it was very disappointing to not see certain others, particularly Robert Reed, Lucius Shepard, and William Sanders. Ah well, maybe they'll produce something more worthy this year. The movie selections were just awful, all kids' stuff (but I gotta say I loved Shrek). And yes, I agree with the fellow who suggested that if you think LOTR was high-achievement literature then you need to get out more.
And when will one of those ceremonies finally give Olaf Stapledon the award he deserves ? I swear, he gets more imagination in three pages than most of our contemporaries get in three volumes.
Btw, if Greg Bear's stuff gets any worse I'm gonna have to write another letter...
So many people who have heard of so few of these authors.
I have to admit that I'm in the same boat.
A little surprised that no one here (maybe its the male orientation) seems to have heard of Connie Willis, who is a five time (last I looked) Hugo winner.
Neuromancer won pretty much all of them; Hugo, Nebula and Philip K. Dick award. I vaugely remember hearing that it's the only book to do so, but I could be wrong on that point.
Vintage computer games and RPG books available. Email me if you're interested.
Plus, the cover art is usually pretty cool
One thing that bothers me about science fiction and fantasy books is the cover art. Very often, it is a picture of the main character holding a weapon or something similarly tacky. Covers like these are one of the reasons why many people do not take speculative fiction seriously. They take one look at the cover and go, "Come on, that's supposed to have insight on the human condition? Riiiight."
For example, Hyperion by Dan Simmons was a fantastic read. John Keats, Chaucer, William Gibson, Philip K. Dick, etc. it's all in there. But what do we get on the cover? A picture of a monster covered with metal spikes.
There are exceptions, and lately it seems publishers are getting the right idea in this area. Neil Gaiman's American Gods has a wonderful cover, in which you don't actually see any gods. It's just a picture of a dark, lonely road, with lightning in the sky. It conveys the right feeling. Another example is Neal Stephenson's Cryptonomicon-- all black with a sort of cryptic symbol. Imagine if the publishers decided to put a picture of US marines shooting at enemy planes.
Amazing to see those "Range" statistics at the end of the press release. This tells the number of votes it took to get on the ballot. In the Short Story category, the nominated story with the least number of votes got 21 votes.
There are SF writers who absolutely live and die based on whether they get nominated. A Hugo Award can jumpstart an entire career. In short fiction it only takes two dozen people to get you the thumbs-up!
Of course, all the nominators have to have supporting memberships in ConJose, and those aren't cheap. Still, it seems like any writer who's two steps above sheer penury could buy memberships for a couple dozen friends and relatives -- under a variety of assumed names, of course -- and then get to wear the fancy "Nominee" ribbon on his convention badge.
Personally, I can think of better ways to spend that kind of money.
Asimov? Limited? You mean then gent who's turned out hundreds of nonfiction works on everything from astronomy to religion? The guy who seemed equally comfortable writing a 3-page short story and a 300 page novel? The fellow who wrote something under just about ever conceivable SF sub-genre you can name?
Oh, yah, he's limited.
"Great men are not always wise: neither do the aged understand judgement." Job 32:9
Lawrence Person (lawrencepersonh@gmailh.com (remove all "h"s to mail)
http://www.lawrenceperson.com/
Danny.
I have written over 900 book reviews
Yes, I know, the rules specify the field of "science fiction or fantasy." And I have nothing against fantasy; I read a little. But last year's Harry Potter novel didn't belong there. Fantasy is a different genre and has its own awards.
...And Call Me Conrad) and To Your Scattered Bodies Go (Farmer). Those are clearly science fiction at the core, but with some fantasy-like setting.
None of the other 48 award winning novels are fantasy. About the closest are the Zelazny winners (Lord of Light,
The Zone website also has a review of Cosmonaut Keep by the same person (me!), who seems to quite like it.
Who would believe in penguins,unless he had seen them? Conor O Brien - Across Three Oceans
One day she'll get the emmy awards she deserves, but for now, a Hugo will do nicely.
Also the cover for Hyperion is inaccurate anyways - the Shrike has four arms. Why even bother to put it on the cover with only two?
Keep reading. My paperback copy of The Rise of Endymion, the fourth and last book in the series, features a four-armed Shrike on the cover.
Not only does it get points for cover accuracy, but it also has the most wrenching and satisfying ending of any book I've read recently.
I think Endymion was the most entertaining of the four, but the last one gets serious credit for being so... right.
...words like these will make poor old JRR turn in his grave. :)
He called his books "adult faery tales" and were written for adults. Of course people still call it a "children's classic" and have every right to do so.
But for me, a book where there was a bloody battle at the end where quite a few of the main characters died is not exactly Cinderalla'ish.
Mode (3) smart-aleck mode. Press * to return to main menu.
Is the best book in the world..... period. And it never won the Hugo..... Hugo is not to be trusted. Hes a lowsy motherfucker
NO SIG
Anyway, Buffy feels out of place here. I suppose she is, technically, Fantasy. But not the kind you'd expect to find in The Magazine of Fantasy and Science-Fiction. Which, I am pained to note, doesn't rate a single nomination.
The Harry Potter books are OK, but I don't quite see the point of the movies. Except to squeeze a little cash from the kiddies.