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China
Town - Miéville wins the Arthur C. Clarke Awards
Time to catch up with all those award soirees we keep on getting
invites for, but never seem to have time to go to.
First up is the famous Arthur C. Clarke Awards for the best science
fiction novels of 2000.
First prize in the ACCs was claimed by a novel we haven't actually
got around to reading yet, the oddly named Perdido Street Station,
written by the even more improbably named China Miéville.
As well as a nice boost in sales - hell, we'll buy the book now
seeing as the PR gonks in their publishers are obviously clueless
enough to have missed us off the review copies list - China also
gets a dosh prize of £2001 (ho ho).
Who from? Why the SF author who helped found the awards. That'll
be Arthur C. Clarke, then.
Next year, this prize goes up to £2002. If they keep increasing
it in a similar vein, by the year 2050, the prize money will - inflation
adjusted - just about cover the cost of a Big Mac.
This prize is granted by a number of panelists chosen by luminaries
from the British SF Foundation and the London Science Museum. Good
job too. If we let the dirty unwashed public choose, we'd only get
some frigging X-File TV tie-in book being voted through as the most
popular work.
Other works which were nominated but didn't get first prize include
the excellent Revelation Space by Alastair Reynolds, and the brilliant
Cosmonaut Keep by Ken MacLeod. These we have read & totally
recommend as fab books of the first order.
Two that got nominated which we didn't enjoy as much include Octavia
E. Butler's Parable of the Talents and Mary Gentle's Ash: A Secret
History. Maybe it's a boy thing?
The award was bestowed on a grinning China Miéville at a
ceremony held at the London Science Museum on May 19th. Old Clarkey
even made a VR appearance at the ceremony from the warmth of his
Sri Lanka palace.
Meanwhile, on the USA's fantasy front, the Mythopoeic Society has
just composed its list of front runners in the Mythopoeic Awards
race.
These include Win Blevins' 'RavenShadow', Midori Snyder's ' Innamorati',
Charles de Lint's 'Forests of the Heart', and 'The Sarantine Mosaic'
by Guy Gavriel Kay.
Perhaps we are now showing our age at The Nest, because we haven't
read any of these no-doubt notable fantasy tomes - although we are
spared total embarrassment by actually having heard of Guy Gavriel
Kay and Charles de Lint.
Which is more than we can say for Win and Midori. Although we think
the latter might have been a character in Babylon Five.
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OTHER CONTENT - June 2001

Hitchhiking
to heaven - Douglas Adams dies unexpectedly
(OBITUARIES & TRIBUTE)
Buffy
defection shocker
(TV NEWS
New
Trek series full of Enterprise?
(TV NEWS)
China
Town - Miéville wins the Arthur C. Clarke Award
(AWARDS)
Of
Metronians and Owls
(WEB SITE REVIEWS)
X-Files
in limbo, but Lone Gunmen slain
(TV NEWS)

Terri Cups. 01/06/2001
Why did Forests of the Heart get nominated by this Mythopoeic bunch?
It is one of the worst fantasy books I read last year. If this is
indicative of their tastes, they can keep their prize.
PaperFIDDLER. 01/06/2001
Revelation Space was robbed. It should have won the ACCs hands down.
It's the best SF novel to have come out of the UK for years.
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