Difference between revisions of "1963 Hugos"
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
m (Bot: Automated text replacement (-files=http://files.fancyclopedia.org/[A-Za-z0-9 ]*\} +files={{fancy}}})) |
m (Text replacement - "| files={{fancy}}" to "") |
||
Line 14: | Line 14: | ||
{{FancyImage|1963 Hugos/Discon I Hugo ballot.jpg}} | {{FancyImage|1963 Hugos/Discon I Hugo ballot.jpg}} | ||
− | {{award | year=1963 | parent=Hugos | + | {{award | year=1963 | parent=Hugos }} |
[[Category:Hugos]] | [[Category:Hugos]] | ||
[[Category:World]] | [[Category:World]] |
Latest revision as of 07:09, 25 April 2021
Awarded September 1, 1963 by Discon I.
This was the first year that the Hugo rules were included along with the ballots.
- Best Novel: The Man in the High Castle by Philip K. Dick
- Best Short Fiction: "The Dragon Masters" by Jack Vance
- Best Dramatic Presentation: No Award
- Best Professional Magazine: The Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction ed. by Robert P. Mills and Avram Davidson
- Best Professional Artist: Roy G. Krenkel
- Best Fanzine: Xero ed. by Richard A. Lupoff and Pat Lupoff
The committee also presented two Special Committee Awards: P. Schuyler Miller, for The Reference Library and Isaac Asimov, for putting science into science fiction.
1962 | Hugos | 1964 | 1963 |
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. |