Difference between revisions of "Campbell Award"
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− | + | ''(Did you mean the [[John W. Campbell, Jr. Memorial Award]]?)'' | |
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− | + | The '''Campbell Award''' (in full, the '''John W. Campbell Award for Best New Writer''') — now '''The Astounding Award for Best New Writer''' — was established in 1973 by Conde Nast, the publisher of ''[[Analog]]'', upon the death of seminal ''[[Astounding Science Fiction]]'' [[editor]] [[John W. Campbell, Jr.]], whom it memorialized. | |
− | + | It honors the best new [[writer]] whose first professional [[SF]] sale was within the previous two years. | |
− | + | For decades, it was the only non-[[Hugo Award]] permitted to be voted on on the Hugo ballot, and it is presented annually with the Hugos at [[Worldcon]]. | |
− | + | This award had no connection to the juried [[John W. Campbell Memorial Award]] except that both were named for Campbell. | |
+ | See [[Campbell Award Rules]] for a detailed discussion of the rules. See also the [[Hugo Awards]] and [[List of Hugo categories]]. | ||
+ | |||
+ | ==Name Change== | ||
+ | In 2019, the Campbell Award was renamed the '''Astounding Award''' after [[neopro]] [[Jeannette Ng]], that year's winner, called Campbell a “[[fascist]]” during the [[Hugo Awards]] ceremony; soon afterward, ''Analog'' Editor [[Trevor Quachri]] announced that award sponsor [[Dell Magazines]] would change the prize’s name. Ng’s condemnatory acceptance speech went on to win the [[2020 Hugos|2020 Best Related Work Hugo]]. | ||
+ | |||
+ | ==More Reading == | ||
+ | * [https://astoundingaward.info/ Official website.] | ||
+ | * [https://www.thehugoawards.org/campbell-history/ Winners and nominees.] | ||
+ | * Campbell Award {{SFE|name=john_w_campbell_award}}. | ||
+ | * Astounding Award {{SFE|name= astounding_award}}. | ||
+ | |||
+ | |||
+ | <tab head=top> | ||
+ | Year||Winner | ||
[[1973 Campbell Award|1973]] ||[[Jerry Pournelle]] | [[1973 Campbell Award|1973]] ||[[Jerry Pournelle]] | ||
[[1974 Campbell Award|1974]] ||(tie) [[Spider Robinson]] and [[Lisa Tuttle]] | [[1974 Campbell Award|1974]] ||(tie) [[Spider Robinson]] and [[Lisa Tuttle]] | ||
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[[2017 Campbell Award|2017]] ||[[Ada Palmer]] | [[2017 Campbell Award|2017]] ||[[Ada Palmer]] | ||
[[2018 Campbell Award|2018]] ||[[Rebecca Roanhorse]] | [[2018 Campbell Award|2018]] ||[[Rebecca Roanhorse]] | ||
− | [[2019 Campbell Award|2019]] ||[[Jeannette Ng]] | + | [[2019 Campbell Award|2019]] ||[[Jeannette Ng]] |
+ | colspan="2" | Name changed to Astounding Award | ||
+ | 2020 ||[[R. F. Kuang]] | ||
+ | 2021 || [[Emily Tesh]] | ||
+ | 2022 || [[Shelley Parker-Chan]] | ||
</tab> | </tab> | ||
− | |||
− | [[Category: | + | {{award |start=1973}} |
+ | [[Category:world]] |
Latest revision as of 16:11, 31 August 2023
(Did you mean the John W. Campbell, Jr. Memorial Award?)
The Campbell Award (in full, the John W. Campbell Award for Best New Writer) — now The Astounding Award for Best New Writer — was established in 1973 by Conde Nast, the publisher of Analog, upon the death of seminal Astounding Science Fiction editor John W. Campbell, Jr., whom it memorialized.
It honors the best new writer whose first professional SF sale was within the previous two years.
For decades, it was the only non-Hugo Award permitted to be voted on on the Hugo ballot, and it is presented annually with the Hugos at Worldcon.
This award had no connection to the juried John W. Campbell Memorial Award except that both were named for Campbell.
See Campbell Award Rules for a detailed discussion of the rules. See also the Hugo Awards and List of Hugo categories.
Name Change[edit]
In 2019, the Campbell Award was renamed the Astounding Award after neopro Jeannette Ng, that year's winner, called Campbell a “fascist” during the Hugo Awards ceremony; soon afterward, Analog Editor Trevor Quachri announced that award sponsor Dell Magazines would change the prize’s name. Ng’s condemnatory acceptance speech went on to win the 2020 Best Related Work Hugo.
More Reading[edit]
- Official website.
- Winners and nominees.
- Campbell Award Entry in The Encyclopedia of Science Fiction.
- Astounding Award Entry in The Encyclopedia of Science Fiction.
Award | 1973— |
This is an award page. If you know something about it, such as who awarded it, who the winners were, what the criteria were, and when it was awarded, please add it! See Standards for Awards. |