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#151 | |
Maria Schneider
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Any award eventually becomes incestuous or tainted over time. I think Nancy Fulda is writing some very traditional sci/fi. She only writes short stories, but it's very much in line with the trad themes. One of hers was nominated for one of those sci/fi awards. It's the one with the dance on the front. It was originally published by Baen, I think. Movement? I can't recall the name. Have to look. But she has an anthology out too and it has a lot of traditional mixed in with a couple of fun ones. I'm more the "fun" reader, but her writing is strong regardless of the theme or style she chooses. |
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#152 | |
Grand Sorcerer
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I read all Hugo nominated things last year and the biggest problem with the works that were nominated just because they were on the sad puppy list was that most of the work was pretty bad and it pushed out better work. |
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#153 |
Grand Sorcerer
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#154 |
Maria Schneider
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I didn't say the Hugo WAS tainted. I said that any of them do become tainted over time because in general, the human race finds a way to bribe, coerce or become exclusive (and thus shut out some group of people). My statement was not meant to attack the Hugo nominations or any other award in particular. It was more a general observation of human behavior.
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#155 | ||
Grand Sorcerer
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Can't really be helped, though. Not as long as it (and other awards) are run like popularity contests anyway. Juried awards can be a bit less easily manipulated. But then they run the risk of alienating the common reader by ignoring the more popular titles/authors. I don't find the Hugos very useful right now myself, but then ... I don't really care if they're useful or not. I can ignore them quite easily. They're a symptom, not an underlying cause of anything. They don't affect whether good SFF gets written or not. They only affect whether an author gets to give a speech at a podium, put a phallic trophy on their shelf (deserved or otherwise), and make some more money on sales. I don't say that to demean any Hugo-winning authors' accomplishments, or anything, but lets face it: fair, relevant, and utterly unbiased recognition for literary "bestness" is unattainable anyway. All you can do is hope that popular and "good" intersect every now and then. |
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#156 | |
Addict
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The value for me of SF awards is that I tend to get locked into my particular authors or types of book, and reading the nominated books gets me to read things I might have missed otherwise. Plus the Hugos is cool because I actually get to vote for them (and this year, I'm even going to be there for them). |
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#157 | |
Grand Sorcerer
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Rather than; "Hey look ... here's a few titles/authors I was unaware of that someone somewhere thought was noteworthy. Maybe I'll check some out. Or not." |
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#158 | |
Grand Sorcerer
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Even as we speak, engineers are working on solar sails to be flown into space this year, ion drives are powering deep space probes, a full-on plasma drive is set to be tested on the ISS next year. Scientists and *engineers* in the US, UK, Russia, and China are looking into a reactionless space drive, space elevators and lunar mining bases are being scoped out, and the physics of warped space for drives is being *tested*. Deep space travel might have been slowed and stalled by idiot politicians but it is nowhere near being fantasy. Real meaningful work on manned exploration of space continues, luddites notwithstanding. |
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#159 | |
Wizard
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#160 |
Resident Curmudgeon
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#161 |
Resident Curmudgeon
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I don't care if a book has won an award or not. I read a book because it interests me.
A good example of why not to read a book just because it's won an award is Cloud Atlas. It won a Man Booker award and is a lousy book. And one reason SF may look like it's dropping in popularity is because of the miscatigorization of some that should be listed as SF. Last edited by JSWolf; 02-03-2015 at 09:07 PM. |
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#162 | |
Grand Sorcerer
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All I know is that manned space travel is not dead. Not yet. Elon Musk, Jeff Bezos, China, and even crippled NASA are still working towards deep space manned exploration. Right now. To the tune of tens of billions. And those aren't paper studies but actual engineering efforts. Me, I'm putting my money on the combination of VASIMIR plasma drive and compact fusion, both being developed with private funds. But Musk's cheap rockets might get us there, too. To paraphrase Arthur C Clarke: "when somebody says something is possible, they may be right or they may be wrong. But when they say something is impossible they are almost certainly wrong." SF is all about looking just beyond the horizon, about "what if's", "if only's" and "if this goes on's". It requires imagination to appreciate and it might be that society evolves away from imagination and a sense of wonder. But it hasn't yet. Edit to add latest news: Manned space travel is such a "fantasy", that the US (finally taking note of chinese plans) is setting down rules for *manned* Lunar Mining operations. At least one US company is already testing the hardware in space. http://www.nbcnews.com/science/space...ntures-n299126 Last edited by fjtorres; 02-04-2015 at 08:02 AM. |
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#163 |
Wizard
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Very good summation. Personally I'm just looking for any really good books/authors that I may be missing out on. I don't care about the politics or the personalities. And I now have 2 lists of books which "someone somewhere thought was noteworthy". I intend to check out those which I think I may like.
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#164 |
Member Retired
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BearmountainBooks didn't say it. I said it. Probably my comments on the Hugo were harsh. I don't know. Very little of what wins the Hugo resonates with me. Maybe that says as much about what sci-fi is being written as it does about what the Hugo selects. But I do have to wonder at the relevance of any sci-fi award that failed to recognize the excellence of the first Hunger Games book.
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#165 | |
Ex-Helpdesk Junkie
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