And those winners were:
- Science Fiction Novel: Blackout/All Clear, Connie Willis (Spectra)
- Fantasy Novel: Kraken, China MiƩville (Macmillan UK; Del Rey)
- First Novel: The Hundred Thousand Kingdoms, N.K. Jemisin (Orbit UK; Orbit US)
- YA Book: Ship Breaker, Paolo Bacigalupi (Little, Brown)
- Novella: The Lifecycle of Software Objects, Ted Chiang (Subterranean)
- Novelette: “The Truth Is a Cave in the Black Mountains”, Neil Gaiman (Stories)
- Short Story: “The Thing About Cassandra”, Neil Gaiman (Songs of Love and Death)
- Magazine: Asimov’s
- Publisher: Tor
- Anthology: Warriors, George R.R. Martin & Gardner Dozois, eds. (Tor)
- Collection: Fritz Leiber: Selected Stories, Fritz Leiber (Night Shade)
- Editor: Ellen Datlow
- Artist: Shaun Tan
- Non-Fiction: Robert A. Heinlein: In Dialogue with His Century: Volume 1: 1907-1948: Learning Curve, William H. Patterson, Jr., (Tor)
- Art Book: Spectrum 17, Cathy & Arnie Fenner, eds. (Underwood)
Kraken is a good book, though I personally would have preferred to see The Fuller Memorandum win.
I'd also have rated Shades of Milk and Honey higher than Hundred Thousand Kingdoms, which is a perfectly solid middle-of-the-road fantasy novel, but didn't thrill me. Shades is superficially smaller, but does something more difficult elegantly.
I can't complain about Ship Breaker, since I haven't read it. But I Shall Wear Midnight was damn good, so I have to assume that Ship Breaker is even better...or that Locus voters have different ideas of "good" than I do.
I complained about the Chiang novella when I wrote about the Hugo short fiction categories recently; it's not bad, but it's far below his usual standard, has no ending, and is both tedious and repetitive.
Yay for Fritz Leiber, though. Too bad he's been dead for a generation, but skiffy awards do seem to go to the oldest and creakiest writer more often than not.
I am still withholding judgement on the Heinlein bio, and will continue to do so until I read it. I suspect I shall have very strong views on it once I do read it.
Oh, and the Gaiman novella is damned strong -- I don't know most of the rest of the short fiction nominees, so I can make no useful comparison.
Congratulations to all of the winners, for what it's worth after my clearly non-congratulatory comments. And I assume all of the SFnal bookies are frantically re-setting their Hugo odds right now.
1 comment:
Neil Gaiman (as much as I love him and consider him the second coming) is, admittedly, hit or miss, which is especially true of his short fiction. Smoke and Mirrors was wonderful, but Fragile Things never took off. His Locus wins this year were definitely hits and savored.
Post a Comment