The Best Related Work category has been on the Hugo ballot every year since 1980. In 28 of those 41 years, it went to a published monograph or essay collection about science fiction and/or fantasy or related themes. The exceptions were as follows:
- Popular science books won twice, in 1981 (Carl Sagan: Cosmos) and 1986 (Tom Weller: Science Made Stupid
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"It's entirely *legitimate* for fandom broadly to express its displeasure"
and
"I don't really *want* a 2021 Hugo winner to commemorate the failures"
I can not want something while still believing it's legitimate. I don't want a peanut butter and jelly sandwich, but I believe it is legitimately food and others may choose to eat it. And I would expect that Nicholas would regularly have different beliefs as the maintainer of a prize (whether something is legitimate or not) and as a voter for that award (whether he likes it or not).
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