Nominating for the Hugos

Well … this year, with no plans to buy a voting membership, I must confess I made no effort to read stuff published in 2016. Especially not short stuff. Nor did I go looking for recommendations.


In fact, if not for the new Series category, I probably wouldn’t have nominated at all. As it is, I nominated three series and a handful of novels and left the rest of the nominating ballot blank.


I am curious to see what happens in the Series category, of course. I nominated:


a) CJ Cherryh’s Foreigner series (this goes without saying).


b) Martha Wells’ Raksura series


c) Lois McMaster Bujold’s Vorkosigan series.


Things I didn’t nominate but can totally see why other people did:


The Expanse series by “James SA Corey,” which started with Leviathan’s Wake. That’s the only one I read — it was impressive, but I didn’t get drawn in to the series, though that’s remained on my radar.


The Raven Boys quadrilogy by Maggie Stiefvater, which come to think of it I might have nominated except I didn’t think of it. Maybe I’ll go do that quick while there’s still time.


The Shadow Campaigns series by Django Wexler. Maybe next year, after I have read the full series.


Things that I didn’t nominate them because I’ve never read even one book in the series, even though I really want to and totally intend to:


The Elantra series by Michelle Sagara. You all keep recommending it. I will try it eventually. Really.


The Red Rising series by Pierce Brown. I hear it’s a very exciting, compelling series.


Things I had no idea were still a thing:


Did you know Terry Brooks was still writing Shannara books? I had no idea.


Ditto for the Valdemar series by Mercedes Lackey.


Very ditto for the Xanth series by Piers Anthony.


Also very ditto for the Myth-Adventures series by Robert Asprin and Jody Lynn Nye.


Very, very ditto for the Dune series, which I see is now being written by Frank Herbert, Brian Herbert, and Kevin J. Anderson.


Wow, those all take me back. You know, I actually read and liked the first Shannara book. I was probably about twelve. The early Myth-Adventures books were fun. Surely the pun-laden Xanth series has mined out that vein of humor by now? I never started Valdemar.


And I can’t help but remember someone’s comment … Jo Walton’s? … that every book in the DUNE series was half as good as the one preceding it. Oh, yes, here is the quote:


[DUNE is] a weird cocktail, part messianic, part intrigue, part ecological, but it works. I loved it when I was twelve, and I read the sequels, which are each half as good as the one before, and I didn’t give up until they were homeopathically good.


Hah, I’d forgotten that ‘homeopathically good’ line. Now I so want to steal it and pretend I thought of it, but alas, it’s no doubt too well known. Anyway, if the series is still going and still true to the half-as-good rule, wow.


So, I will definitely be keeping an eye on what makes the short list. But if CJ Cherryh’s series isn’t on there, I will be incensed, no matter what else appears.


Please Feel Free to Share: Facebook twitter google_plus reddit pinterest linkedin tumblr mail
 •  0 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on March 17, 2017 05:00
No comments have been added yet.