LAWRENCE, KS - May 5, 2014
This year's
finalists for the Theodore Sturgeon Memorial Award for best short science fiction have been selected, announced
Christopher McKitterick, Director of the SF center. The awards will be presented on Friday, June 13, as part of the
Campbell Conference.
I'm pleased to announce the finalists for the 2014
Theodore Sturgeon Memorial Award for the best short SF of the year:
"Bloom," Gregory Norman Bossert.
Asimov's, Dec 2013.
"The Weight of the Sunrise," Vylar Kaftan.
Asimov's, Feb 2013.
"They Shall Salt the Earth with Seeds of Glass," Alaya Dawn Johnson.
Asimov's, Jan 2013.
"Over There," Will McIntosh.
Asimov's, Jan 2013.
"The Wildfires of Antarctica," Alan DeNiro.
Tyrannia and Other Renditions, Small Beer Press (originally appeared in Oct/Nov
Asimov's).
"The Irish Astronaut," Val Nolan.
Electric Velocipede, May 2013.
"In Joy, Knowing the Abyss Behind," Sarah Pinsker.
Strange Horizons, July 2013.
"Mystic Falls," Robert Reed.
Clarkesworld, Nov 2013.
"Selected Program Notes from the Retrospective Exhibition of Theresa Rosenberg Latimer," Kenneth Schneyer.
Clockwork Phoenix 4, Mythic Delirium Books.
"The Urashima Effect," E. Lily Yu.
Clarkesworld, June 2013.
The Theodore Sturgeon Memorial Award recognizes the best science fiction short story each year. It was established in 1987 by James Gunn and the heirs of Theodore Sturgeon, including his partner Jayne Engelhart Tannehill and Sturgeon's children; as an appropriate memorial to one of the great short-story writers in a field distinguished by its short fiction. The current jury consists of
Elizabeth Bear,
Andy Duncan,
James Gunn,
Kij Johnson, and
Noël Sturgeon, Trustee of the Theodore Sturgeon Literary Estate.
Sturgeon, born in 1918, was closely identified with the Golden Age of science fiction, 1939-1950, and is often mentioned as one of the four writers who helped establish that age. The others were Isaac Asimov, Robert A. Heinlein, and A. E. van Vogt; all four had their first SF stories published in 1939. In addition to fiction (his best-known novel is the classic,
More Than Human), Sturgeon also wrote book reviews, poetry, screenplays, radio plays, and television plays, including two classic teleplays for the original Star Trek. He was a popular lecturer and teacher, and was a regular visiting writer at the Intensive Institute on the Teaching of Science Fiction. Sturgeon died in 1985. His books, manuscripts, and papers are deposited at the University of Kansas.
The Award will be presented Friday, June 13, at the University of Kansas Student Union in Lawrence, Kansas, June 13-15. The Conference has been held each year since 1978. It includes a Friday-evening banquet where the annual
Theodore Sturgeon Memorial Award and the
John W. Campbell Memorial Award are given; a Saturday-morning roundtable discussion with scholars, scientists, and writers of science fiction; an afternoon discussion about interdisciplinary science-fiction studies, and other events. This year's topic is "Science Fiction in the Real World," with a special focus on the work and life of Frederik Pohl, a long-time friend.