Works by women eligible for 2009 SF Awards: Difference between revisions

From Feminist SF Wiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search
(not by a woman)
Line 137: Line 137:
**The Hand of the Devil on a String (Shimmer, July 2008)
**The Hand of the Devil on a String (Shimmer, July 2008)
**The Purple Basil (Realms of Fantasy, October 2008)
**The Purple Basil (Realms of Fantasy, October 2008)
**The Serpent Who Sleeps Beneath The Shards (Talebones 37, Fall 2008)
*[[Mary Hodge]], [http://coyotewildmag.com/2008/august/hodge_mary_family.html Family] (Coyote Wild, August 2008)
*[[Mary Hodge]], [http://coyotewildmag.com/2008/august/hodge_mary_family.html Family] (Coyote Wild, August 2008)
*[[Rosamund Hodge]], [http://coyotewildmag.com/2008/august/hodge_rosamund_i_have_heard_angels.html I Have Heard the Angels Singing, Each to Each] (Coyote Wild, August 2008)
*[[Rosamund Hodge]], [http://coyotewildmag.com/2008/august/hodge_rosamund_i_have_heard_angels.html I Have Heard the Angels Singing, Each to Each] (Coyote Wild, August 2008)

Revision as of 19:38, 7 June 2009

This is a list of works written by women and eligible for SF awards to be given out in 2009 based on works published from January 1, 2008, to December 31, 2008. 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 for nomination based on the specific date a work was published.) We're listing these works 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 work, along with the relevant information: 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.

Related: Women eligible for 2009 SF Awards

Book Length Fiction

Novels

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

First Novel

Locus and Bram Stoker eligible

Collections

World Fantasy, Stoker and Locus eligible - single author, original or reprint, single or multiple editors

Anthologies

World Fantasy, Stoker and Locus eligible - multiple author original or reprint, single or multiple editors

Short Fiction

Short Stories

Hugo, Locus, World Fantasy, and Sturgeon eligible. World Fantasy is under 10,000 words

Novelettes

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

Novellas

Hugo, Stoker, Locus and World Fantasy eligible; Hugo rules say a novella is roughly 17,500-40,000 words, World Fantasy is 10,000-40,000 words

Non-Fiction

Related Books

Hugo, Stoker (as Non-Fiction) and Locus eligible, non-fiction book relating to the genre


Poetry

Poem

Stoker eligible


Long Poem

Rhysling eligible

Short Poem

Rhysling eligible

Film and Television

Dramatic Presentation, Long Form

Hugo eligible

Dramatic Presentation, Short Form

Hugo eligible

Script

Nebula eligible