John Scalzi's Redshirts Wins Hugo Award for Best Novel
The Hugo awards were presented last night, providing recognition to the best science fiction of the past year. The award for Best Novel was presented to John Scalzi for Redshirts, a comedic work playing on the trope of low-ranking officers frequently getting themselves killed in sci-fi works. Best Novella went to Brandon Sanderson for The Emperor's Soul, and Best Novelette went to The Girl-Thing Who Went Out for Sushi by Pat Cadigan. Best Graphic Story was awarded to the creators of Saga. Best Dramatic Presentation (long form) was given for Joss Whedon's The Avengers movie, and (short form) was presented for the "Blackwater" episode of the Game of Thrones TV show. The Best New Writer was Mur Lafferty. Here's a full list of the nominees and winners.
Thank you for being a friend
Traveled down the road and back again
Your heart is true, you're a pal and a cosmonaut.
And if you threw a party
Invited everyone you knew
You would see the biggest gift would be from me
And the card attached would say, thank you for being a friend.
Good, that no Disneyland this time. I know, it's a matter of taste. A lot of people value Scalzi or Adams. But... where is Asimov-like Sci fi? Deep, intelectual, but not "geek".
Chief O'Brien and Yeoman Rand are the only two I can think of.
"I don't know, therefore Aliens" Wafflebox1
The reviews on Amazon made it seem mediocre at best. Really, there was no better science fiction this year?
I think the really remarkable fact here is that the Dramatic Presentation award (Short Form) went to something other than Doctor Who.
In Star Trek IV - the "Save the Whales" movie, when answering the biologist who asked something like 'so, there's no money in the 23rd century?"
Which Kirk replied, 'No.'
Which makes me wonder how they're economy works. That's something Sci-Fi writers never address - what an economy would look like in the future.
How are resources allocated?
Are people so productive that building starships to roam the galaxy are cheap?
Or is there an underclass of robots who do all the work? And if so, are the resources allocated equally among everyone - meaning everyone gets the equivalent of an iPad, car, big screen TV, all the medical care they need, the same for food, etc ....
So, I may be living under a rock or something, or maybe it's because I don't really dig Game Of Thrones, or I'm horribly misinformed about the Hugo awards...
But how is Game of Thrones Sci-Fi?
> no, yes, maybe (tagging beta)
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...but it's really science fiction or fantasy, because there is a difference.
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If you are interested in Pat Cadigan's novella, the preview / kindle sample of "edge of Infinity" includes the complete story. It can be found here.
'The tyrant will always find pretext for his tyranny.' - Aesop's Fables
Alistair Reynolds. Charles Stross. Gregory Benford. There's three.