Women eligible for 2008 SF Awards: Difference between revisions

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* [[Stephanie Burgis]], "Locked Doors" (Strange Horizons, 1 January 2007) http://strangehorizons.com/2007/20070101/doors-f.shtml
* [[Stephanie Burgis]], "Locked Doors" (Strange Horizons, 1 January 2007) http://strangehorizons.com/2007/20070101/doors-f.shtml
* [[P.E. Cunningham]], "Car 17" (The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, July 2007)
* [[P.E. Cunningham]], "Car 17" (The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, July 2007)
* [[Melanie Fazi]] (translated by Christopher Priest), "Elegy" (Fantasy and Science Fiction, June 2007)
* [[Sheila Finch]], "First was the Word" (Fantasy and Science Fiction, June 2007)
* [[Karen Joy Fowler]], "Always" (Asimov's, April/May 2007)
* [[Karen Joy Fowler]], "Always" (Asimov's, April/May 2007)
* [[Lisa Goldstein]], "Lilyanna" (Asimov's, April/May 2007)
* [[Lisa Goldstein]], "Lilyanna" (Asimov's, April/May 2007)
* [[M.K. Hobson]], "The Hotel Astarte" (Realms of Fantasy, June 2007)
* [[M.K. Hobson]], "The Hotel Astarte" (Realms of Fantasy, June 2007)
* [[M.K. Hobson]], "PowerSuit" (The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, July 2007)
* [[M.K. Hobson]], "PowerSuit" (Fantasy and Science Fiction, July 2007)
* [[Carrie Laben]], "Something in the Mermaid Way" (Clarkesworld, March 2007) http://www.clarkesworld.com/magazine/laben_03_07.html
* [[Carrie Laben]], "Something in the Mermaid Way" (Clarkesworld, March 2007) http://www.clarkesworld.com/magazine/laben_03_07.html
* [[Tanith Lee]], "Cold Fire" (Asimov's, February 2007)
* [[Tanith Lee]], "Cold Fire" (Asimov's, February 2007)
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* [[Holly Phillips]], "Three Days of Rain" (Asimov's, June 2007)
* [[Holly Phillips]], "Three Days of Rain" (Asimov's, June 2007)
* [[Marta Randall]], "The Dark Boy" (Fantasy and Science Fiction, January 2007)
* [[Marta Randall]], "The Dark Boy" (Fantasy and Science Fiction, January 2007)
* [[Marta Randall]], "Lazaro y Antonio" (Fantasy and Science Fiction, June 2007)
* [[M. Rickert]], "Memoir of a Deer Woman" (Fantasy and Science Fiction, March 2007)
* [[M. Rickert]], "Memoir of a Deer Woman" (Fantasy and Science Fiction, March 2007)
* [[Erica L. Satifka]], "Automatic" (Clarkesworld, January 2007) http://www.clarkesworldmagazine.com/satifka_01_07.html
* [[Erica L. Satifka]], "Automatic" (Clarkesworld, January 2007) http://www.clarkesworldmagazine.com/satifka_01_07.html

Revision as of 11:26, 13 May 2007

This is a list of women eligible for SF awards to be given out in 2008 based on works published from January 1, 2007, to December 31, 2007. Awards that follow this eligibility format include the Hugo, the Campbell, the World Fantasy Award, the Tiptree, and the Phillip K. Dick. (The Nebulas have a rolling period of eligibility based on the specific date a work was published.) We're listing these women as a form of award activism: to bring them greater attention, to share information about them for ourselves, and to help avoid problems like the 2006 Hugo vacuum. See Eligibility and voting by award for a quick index of information about individual awards, and links to the individual award pages for more detail.

Please include here any eligible woman, along with the information about her eligible work: title, publication date, and format. For novels, it's useful to search Amazon for the author's name: the list of works has publication date and format right there.

Note: Some awards are based on first publication and other awards are based on first publication in the US, England, etc. If a work was first published outside of the time period but would be eligible for some awards, please add it and add in parentheses any restrictions or explanations about eligibility.

Women eligible for Campbell Best New Writer

Authors who published their first work in 2006 or 2007

Women eligible for work-specific awards

A Note on Categories

Each set of awards defines its categories in its own way. There is a lot of overlap, but inevitably differences arise. For example, some awards allow SF and fantasy, others only one, and others have separate categories. Different awards define the types of short fiction with different word lengths. And different awards have different eligibility rules as regards to where a work is published, when it is published, and the nationality of the author(s). Please refer to the award descriptions below for more details.

Novel

Hugo, World Fantasy, Locus and Campbell Memorial eligible: if published in paperback in the US, Philip K. Dick eligible

Novella

Hugo, Locus and World Fantasy eligible; Hugo rules say a novella is roughly 17,500-40,000 words

Novelette

Hugo eligible; Hugo rules say a novelette is roughly 7,500-17,500 words, which may count as a novella for the World Fantasy, or a short story for the World Fantasy or Sturgeon

Short Story

Hugo, Locus, World Fantasy, and Sturgeon eligible

Related Book

Hugo and Locus eligible

Dramatic Presentation, Long Form

Hugo eligible

Written and/or directed by women, as indicated:

Dramatic Presentation, Short Form

Hugo eligible

Written and/or directed by women, as indicated:

Anthology

World Fantasy and Locus eligible

Collection

World Fantasy and Locus eligible

Women eligible for multi-work awards

Editor, Long Form

Hugo eligible

Editor, Short Form

Hugo eligible

Professional Artist

Hugo and World Fantasy eligible

Semiprozine

Hugo eligible

Fanzine

Hugo eligible

Fan Writer

Hugo eligible

Fan Artist

Hugo eligible