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Hugo, Hugo, as long as you USA-go

The Hugo Award nominees get trotted out for 2002. Truly global, as long as your definition of the world starts at the West Coast and ends at the East Coast.


Well, 2002 is rolling all over us, and it's time for the Hugo Awards once more, and as always, it's the USA that walks away with the majority of the best smarties.

Oh well, he who pays the piper, and all that. This year, Con Jose is the lucky World Science Fiction Convention giving out the gongs.

On with the roll-call for the Hugo award nominees.

BEST NOVEL

The Curse of Chalion by Lois McMaster Bujold (HarperCollins/Eos)

American Gods by Neil Gaiman
(Morrow)

Perdido Street Station by China Miéville
(Del Rey) (Token Brit vote)

Cosmonaut Keep by Ken MacLeod
(Tor) (Token Jock vote)

Passage by Connie Willis
(Bantam)

The Chronoliths by Robert Charles Wilson
(Tor)

BEST NOVELLA

"May Be Some Time" by Brenda W. Clough
(Analog 4/01)

"The Diamond Pit" by Jack Dann
(F&SF 6/01)

"The Chief Designer" by Andy Duncan
(Asimov's 6/01)

"Stealing Alabama" by Allen Steele
(Asimov's 1/01)

"Fast Times at Fairmont High" by Vernor Vinge
(The Collected Stories of Vernor Vinge, Tor)

BEST NOVELETTE

"Hell Is the Absence of God" by Ted Chiang
(Starlight 3, Tor)

"Undone" by James Patrick Kelly
(Asimov's 6/01)

"The Days Between" by Allen Steele
(Asimov's 3/01)

"Lobsters" by Charles Stross
(Asimov's 6/01)

"The Return of Spring" by Shane Tourtellotte
(Analog 11/01)

BEST SHORT STORY

"The Ghost Pit" by Stephen Baxter
(Asimov's 7/01) (Token Brit, but a US magazine)

"Spaceships" by Michael A. Burstein
(Analog 6/01)

"The Bones of the Earth" by Ursula K. Le Guin
(Tales from Earthsea, Harcourt)

"Old MacDonald Had a Farm" by Mike Resnick
(Asimov's 9/01)

"The Dog Said Bow-Wow" by Michael Swanwick
(Asimov's 10-11/01)

BEST RELATED BOOK

OK, so Paper Tiger is British. Yipee.

The Art of Richard Powers by Jane Frank
(Paper Tiger)

Meditations on Middle-Earth by Karen Haber, ed.
(St. Martin's Press/A Byron Preiss Book)

The Art of Chesley Bonestell by Ron Miller & Frederick C. Durant III
(Paper Tiger)

I Have This Nifty Idea...Now What Do I Do With It? by Mike Resnick
(Wildside Press)

J. R. R. Tolkien: Author of the Century by Tom Shippey (HarperCollins)

Being Gardner Dozois by Michael Swanwick
(Old Earth Books)

BEST DRAMATIC PRESENTATION

Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone
(1492 Pictures/Heyday Films/Warner Bros.) Directed by Chris Columbus; Screenplay by Steven Kloves

The Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring
(New Line Cinema/The Saul Zaentz Company/WingNut Films) Directed by Peter Jackson; Screenplay by Fran Walsh & Phillipa Boyens & Peter Jackson; Peter Jackson, Barrie M. Osborne

Monsters, Inc.
(Pixar Animation Studios/Walt Disney Pictures) Directed by Pete Docter, David Silverman and Lee Unkrich. Story by Jill Culton, Peter Docter, Ralph Eggleston and Jeff Pidgeon. Darla K. Anderson, Producer. John Lasseter and Andrew Stanton, Executive Producers.

Buffy the Vampire Slayer "Once More, With Feeling"
(Fox Television Studios/Mutant Enemy, Inc.) Written & Directed by Joss Whedon. Joss Whedon and Marti Noxon, Executive Producers.

Shrek
(DreamWorks SKG/Pacific Data Images). Directed by Andrew Adamson and Vicky Jenson. Written by Ted Elliott & Terry Rossio and Joe Stillman and Roger S. H. Schulman. Jeffrey Katzenberg, Aron Warner and John H. Williams, Producers. Penney Finkelman Cox and Sandra Rabins, Executive Producers.

BEST PROFESSIONAL EDITOR

Ellen Datlow
(SCI FICTION and anthologies)

Gardner Dozois
(Asimov's)

Patrick Nielsen Hayden
(Tor Books; Starlight anthology series)

Stanley Schmidt
(Analog)

Gordon Van Gelder
(F&SF)

BEST PROFESSIONAL ARTIST

Jim Burns

Bob Eggleton

Frank Kelly Freas

Donato Giancola

Michael Whelan

BEST SEMIPROZINE

Absolute Magnitude, edited by Warren Lapine

Interzone, edited by David Pringle
(Token Brit, but does living in Brighton count? That's almost France, isn't it?)

Locus, edited by Charles N. Brown

The New York Review of Science Fiction, edited by Kathryn Cramer, David Hartwell & Kevin J. Maroney

Speculations, edited by Susan Fry, published by Kent Brewster

BEST FANZINE

File 770, edited by Mike Glyer

Ansible, edited by Dave Langford
(Token Brit; the Fan Father. Kiss his ring and tremble)

Challenger, edited by Guy Lillian III

Mimosa, edited by Richard & Nicki Lynch

Plokta, edited by Alison Scott, Steve Davies & Mike Scott

BEST FAN WRITER

Jeff Berkwits

Bob Devney

John L. Flynn

Mike Glyer

Dave Langford

Steven H Silver

BEST FAN ARTIST

Sheryl Birkhead

Brad Foster

Teddy Harvia

Sue Mason

Frank Wu

BEST WEB SITE

Locus Online, Mark R. Kelly editor/webmaster www.locusmag.com

SciFi.com, Craig Engler, executive producer
www.scifi.com

SF Site, Rodger Turner, publisher/managing editor www.sfsite.com

Strange Horizons, Mary Anne Mohanraj, editor-in-chief
www.strangehorizons.com

Tangent Online, Dave Truesdale, senior editor; Tobias Buckell, webmaster
www.tangentonline.com


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NEWS ARCHIVE

 

OTHER CONTENT - May 2002

NEW. Add this news to your own web site for free!

The Gold(in) Standard
It's not every author who can boast they co-authored a science fiction novel with E.E. Doc Smith. Stephen Goldin slips into the author's hot seat for an interview.
(AUTHOR INTERVIEW)

Art for SF's Sake
John Jarrold, the SF editor behind this year's Arthur C. Clarke Award-nominated SF novel - Pashazade by Jon Courtney Grimwood - issues a plea of tolerance for creative art on book jacket covers.
(COMMENT)

Muster the Goombahs
SF author Harlan Ellison has a quiet word about Isaac Asimov's death and an egregious misreading of history.
(COMMENT)

Acquisition (Trek)
With the Enterprise crew incapacitated and a Ferengi raiding party aboard, it falls to Trip, Archer, and T'Pol to save the ship. More Trek reviews from the master.
(TV REVIEWS)

Drawing the Jedi
May's crop of book reviews hits the streets - including all those juicy DK Star Wars art books dropping out of hyperspace just in time for the Clone Wars movie.

(BOOK REVIEWS)

Jack's Back
Had he ever left? Writer Jack L Chalker is one of the few novelists who can switch from fantasy to science fiction with consummate ease. Read about his life and times here.
(AUTHOR INTERVIEWS)

The Observation Deck
Includes the scientific community's latest evidence on the
Chinese 'Atlantis' - not to mention an interesting offer from the desk of Future Orbits magazine.
(COMMENT)

Hugo, Hugo, as long as you USA-go
The Hugo Award nominees get trotted out for 2002. Truly global, as long as your definition of the world starts at the West Coast and ends at the East Coast.
(AWARDS)

Moving with the Times
An American Physicist believes he has discovered how to visit the past, driven on by a terrible personal tragedy.
(WEIRD SCIENCE)

Bitten by a Scorpion
Conan the Barbarian (in virtually all but name) clobbers again in another sword and sorcery adventure, but this time he is played by The Rock and called Mathayus, the Scorpion King.
(FILM REVIEWS)

Vampire Blood and Egyptian Assassins
Rod weighs in with some neck-biting action from the cult movie Blade II, and tops it off with a trip to see the Scorpion King too.
(FILM REVIEWS)


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