very brief Hugo thoughts
Mar. 11th, 2020 09:23 amArgh, it's almost the end of nomination time and I was totally going to make a post and never did!
Best Novel
A Memory Called Empire (Martine)
Ninth House (Bardugo)
Raven Tower (Leckie)
...that's all I can think of right now, any other thoughts?
Best Novelette
For He Can Creep (Carroll) (I expected the title to only be tangentially related but I was happily surprised!) (thanks
ambyr)
Dave's Head (Palmer) - I always love Palmer's short work, and this one I think is her best yet. (Also, for anyone who has read or will read this, I would like to talk about what is going on. (I think I have figured out most of what's going on except what exactly IS in the things.) (from
psocoptera)
Best Short Story
Compassionate Simulation (Swirsky, Lee). Content note: abuse. ...This one hit me really hard. (I think this one is from
psocoptera)
Best Related Work
hamsterwoman pointed out that we can nominate the article about John M. Ford in Slate by which I of course mean not only the article but the work described in that article of bringing together people so that his stuff can be republished! What a great idea!!
Best Novel
A Memory Called Empire (Martine)
Ninth House (Bardugo)
Raven Tower (Leckie)
...that's all I can think of right now, any other thoughts?
Best Novelette
For He Can Creep (Carroll) (I expected the title to only be tangentially related but I was happily surprised!) (thanks
Dave's Head (Palmer) - I always love Palmer's short work, and this one I think is her best yet. (Also, for anyone who has read or will read this, I would like to talk about what is going on. (I think I have figured out most of what's going on except what exactly IS in the things.) (from
Best Short Story
Compassionate Simulation (Swirsky, Lee). Content note: abuse. ...This one hit me really hard. (I think this one is from
Best Related Work
no subject
Date: 2020-03-11 09:52 pm (UTC)From http://www.thehugoawards.org/hugo-categories/
"Because a large proportion of the people who nominate on the Hugo Awards reside in the USA, and because those people often do not get to see works first published outside the USA until those works get US publication, WSFS extends the eligibility of works first published outside the USA. Works published in prior years outside of the USA are eligible if they were published for the first time in the USA in the current year."
So yes!
no subject
Date: 2020-03-11 10:04 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2020-03-12 03:37 am (UTC)I guess the grim part isn't really relevant, actually, now that I think about it.
no subject
Date: 2020-03-12 07:40 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2020-03-12 03:52 pm (UTC)What I really really like paper books for is books where I want to flip around for various reasons. So any reference book, of course, but also often plot-heavy books (hence the "I wish I had a paper copy" above) where something happens and I'm like "...wait!! was that related to the thing five chapters ago??" and I want to flip back and cross-reference. I know there are lots of e-book tools for this (and search is a great thing!) but I'm so used to doing it with paper (and often retain a sort of visual memory for pages) that it's still generally both faster and more pleasant for me to flip through paper pages looking for something like that.