NEBULA AWARDS SHOWCASE 2012
Prometheus Books
Copyright © 2012
Science Fiction and Fantasy Writers of America (SFWA, Inc.)
All right reserved.
ISBN: 978-1-61614-619-1
Contents
Introduction: In Which Your Editors Consider the Nebula Awards of Yesterday, Today, and Tomorrow James Patrick Kelly and John Kessel.....................11
Ponies Kij Johnson.......................................................................................................................................19
The Sultan of the Clouds Geoff Landis....................................................................................................................25
Map of Seventeen Chris Barzak............................................................................................................................75
And I Awoke and Found Me Here on the Cold Hill's Side James Tiptree, Jr..................................................................................99
In the Astronaut Asylum Kendall Evans and Samantha Henderson.............................................................................................109
Pishaach Shweta Narayan..................................................................................................................................117
excerpt from Blackout/All Clear Connie Willis............................................................................................................139
Bumbershoot Howard Hendrix...............................................................................................................................159
Arvies Adam Troy-Castro..................................................................................................................................161
How Interesting: A Tiny Man Harlan Ellison...............................................................................................................177
The Jaguar House, in Shadow Aliette de Bodard............................................................................................................185
The Green Book Amal El-Mohtar............................................................................................................................209
That Leviathan, Whom Thou Hast Made Eric James Stone.....................................................................................................223
excerpt from I Shall Wear Midnight Terry Pratchett.......................................................................................................247
To Theia Ann K. Schwader.................................................................................................................................263
The Lady Who Plucked Red Flowers beneath the Queen's Window Rachel Swirsky...............................................................................265
2011 Nebula Awards Nominees and Honorees..................................................................................................................315
Past Nebula Winners.......................................................................................................................................319
About the Cover...........................................................................................................................................333
About the Editors.........................................................................................................................................335
Introduction
IN WHICH YOUR EDITORS
CONSIDER THE NEBULA AWARDS
OF YESTERDAY, TODAY,
AND TOMORROW
James Patrick Kelly and John Kessel
Jim: When you compare the very first Nebula ballot to our 2011 ballot, you
see a lot of differences. One is that the 1966 ballot was much, much longer—there
was no preliminary winnowing back then. For example, Nebula voters
had to choose a winner from thirty-one nominees in the short story category
alone! This year there are just twenty-six nominees in the four fiction categories
combined. Another difference was that there were just four awards
given, Novel, Novella, Novelette, and Short Story. No Ray Bradbury Award
for Outstanding Dramatic Presentation or Andre Norton Award for Young
Adult Science Fiction and Fantasy. The Bradbury was started in 1992, but
then went dormant until it was rebooted in 1999. The Norton was first given
in 2006. Another difference was that there was just one woman nominated in
any category: Jane Beauclerk, a pseudonym for M. J. Engh. Yikes! Note that
the 2011 ballot has more women than men. And all five winners in 1966
were science fiction stories, as were the vast majority of the nominees. For the
record, the winner for best novel was Frank Herbert's
Dune, the tied winners
for novella were "The Saliva Tree" by Brian W. Aldiss and "He Who Shapes"
by Roger Zelazny, the novelette category was won by Zelazny's "The Doors
of His Face, the Lamps of His Mouth," and the short story award went to
Harlan Ellison's "'Repent, Harlequin!' Said the Ticktockman." In the four
plus decades since, we have seen a proliferation of subgenres in our little
corner of literature, but clearly we have nominated more fantasy than science
fiction this year.
Of course, in 1966 there wasn't nearly as much fantasy as science fiction
being published. So you would expect the Nebulas to track a publishing
trend that reflects changes in popular tastes. And the two of us have certainly
written plenty of fantasy, even though we're primarily known as science fiction
writers. So has the rise of fantasy been at the expense of science fiction?
John: "At the expense of ..." is a loaded phrase; after all, this is now the Science
Fiction
and Fantasy Writers of America. But even then I think the answer is not
simple. The geography of our genre(s) has changed drastically over the last forty-five
years, and the consequences are evident everywhere. Consider, as a minor
example but a reflection of the larger movement, the term "speculative fiction."
In both 1966 and 2011 the term was in widespread use, but its meaning has
changed drastically. In 1966 it was already in its second incarnation. Originally
the term was coined by Robert Heinlein (in 1947) to describe a subset of science
fiction extrapolating from known science and technology; what he meant by it
is what we today essentially mean by science fiction. By 1966 the term was
being hijacked by New Wave writers and editors—notably by Judith Merril—to
indicate SF that de-emphasized the science and focused on sociological extrapolation
and stylistic experimentation. Today "spec fic" has lost almost all rigor
and is used as an umbrella term to describe any fiction, SF or fantasy or horror
or slipstream, that is not mimetic fiction. So Vernor Vinge and N. K. Jemisin
and Kelly Link and Paolo Bacagalupi and Holly Black and China Miéville are
all "speculative fiction" writers in one big happy family.
Or is the family such a happy one? As many commentators have noted,
there is no longer an easily identifiable center that can be used to, say, identify
all the stories nominated for the Nebula Award in any year. Hard science
stories compete with liminal fantasies, which compete with horror fictions,
which compete with sociological extrapolations, which compete with nostalgic
exercises in pulp adventure. Many SF writers bemoan the very fact you
note, that fantasy is overwhelming science fiction in sales and popularity, and
that the things that are called science fiction today would not have passed
muster as SF in John W. Campbell's
Astounding. But perhaps it's only the
dinosaurs who have even heard of John W. Campbell. Is the field losing all
coherence, or are these changes just the natural effects of time passing and the
world changing? Is any of this something that Nebula voters and readers
should worry about? Does the reader who picks up this volume have any
reason to know what she is going to get when she reads its contents?
Jim: It's a good question. The boundaries of "speculative fiction"—or as the
critic John Clute calls it,
fantastika—have expanded to include a lot of literary
territory. But to mix metaphors, I actually like the "Big Tent" we've set up for
our readers here. It fits with my own writerly sensibilities, and yours as well,
I'll bet. Sure, fantasy and its many subgenres have captured some readers who
might once have been exclusively science fiction fans, but I like to think that
many fantasy readers retain a lively interest in what's happening in SF—and
vice versa. Certainly there are editors who publish short fiction in print and
online who still welcome a variety of genres to their table of contents. Many
of the short fiction nominees first appeared in magazines featuring stories that
are as likely to explore Venus as they are to visit Faerie. I wonder if speculative
fiction's many awards, but the Hugo and Nebula especially, are not the
center of our sprawling genre, at least at this point in history. Were the science
fiction novels of Connie Willis and Paolo Bacigalupi awarded Nebulas in
2010 and 2009 respectively? Well, Ursula Le Guin's fantasy and Michael
Chabon's alternate history took the novel Nebs in 2008 and 2007. So if we're
keeping score, which genre is ahead? Fantasy or science fiction?
My answer is
yes.
John: When the Nebulas were founded there were two reasons for their
founding, and I think the difference between those reasons is illuminating
and still relevant. Science Fiction Writers of America was a fledgling organization,
dedicated to improving the situation of SF writers, but it had no
money. Lloyd Biggle, the SFWA secretary-treasurer, suggested that SFWA
sell an annual anthology to publishers with the proceeds going to support the
organization. This rapidly became a plan to create a new SF award, voted on
by writers, and thus the Nebulas were born. But the other reason, according
to Damon Knight, was to improve the breed, to "show the quality of modern
science fiction, its range, and ... its growing depth and maturity." Knight
was a critic and teacher as well as an editor and writer, and I believe he saw
the Nebulas not simply as a way to honor the best work in the field, but to
encourage writers to set their sights higher.
In the event, the trophies cost more than the amount raised by the
anthology. But what of Knight's other purpose? Have the awards spurred us
on to write better SF and fantasy? Have they been good for the reputation of
the genre?
I think it's demonstrable that some of the best work written in the last
forty years has been recognized by the Nebulas. And the awards have gone to
grizzled old pros and to newcomers, to Ursula Le Guin's
Powers, published in
the forty-eighth year of her career, and to Ted Chiang's "Tower of Babylon,"
the first story he ever published. To classics like
Dune, The Left Hand of Darkness,
Neuromancer, "Aye, and Gomorrah," "When it Changed," "Houston,
Houston, Do You Read?" "Beggars in Spain," "Bears Discover Fire," "Fire
Watch," "Behold the Man," "R&R," and "Magic for Beginners." To names
who could not be more famous (Isaac Asimov) and to those who could (Jack
Cady). I find it reassuring that the race does not always go to the best-known
competitor; that every year there are new names on the final ballot.
I don't suppose there's anyone who would maintain that the winners have
been without question the best stories of the year. Just as the Oscars go to
films chosen for reasons that, in retrospect, seem inexplicable, sometimes factors
other than literary merit influence the outcome of the voting. Or people's
judgment just changes over time. Or there just isn't room to give awards to
all the worthy stories. At the 2011 Academy Awards Stephen Spielberg
acknowledged these realities when he presented the best picture award,
saying, "In a moment one of these ten movies will join a list that includes
On
the Waterfront, Midnight Cowboy, The Godfather, and
The Deer Hunter. The other
nine will join a list that includes
The Grapes of Wrath, Citizen Kane, The Graduate,
and
Raging Bull."
Past Nebula nominee Andy Duncan recently made a provocative point
about awards:
Over the years, I have decided the primary purpose of an award is not to celebrate
individuals, but to celebrate the field those individuals work in. We
squirm when this is made overt, as in the sanctimonious aren't-we-great
speeches about the universal appeal of motion pictures at the Oscars every
year, or that endless Grammys tribute this year to the music charities supported
by the recording industry. Yet it's true anyway; it's less important
who wins, say, the Hugos in any given year than the fact that, once again,
the Hugos are given out, generating another opportunity to see one
another, and applaud one another, and talk to one another about our field
and how it's doing—and, yes, to kvetch about who got robbed and who's
overrated and who the real winner is.
Jim: We don't have to go to the history books for reassurance that the race
does not always go to the best-known competitor: it seems to me that the
takeaway from this year's list of nominees is that fresh voices will be heard.
With wins in novella and novelette, new writers Rachel Swirsky and Eric
James Stone have posted their names on the marquee just a few years into
their careers. Reminds me of 1982 when a couple of tyros named Connie
Willis and John Kessel swooped out of nowhere and won all three short fiction
Nebulas. And first time nominees like Vylar Kaftan, Amal El-Mohtar,
Felicity Shoulders, Aliette de Bodard, Shweta Narayan, Christopher Kastensmidt,
Caroline M. Yoachim, J. Kathleen Cheney, M. K. Hobson, N. K.
Jemisin, Mary Robinette Kowal, and Nnedi Okorafor represent almost half
of the ballot. It's the largest such group in the history of the award.
Speaking from personal experience, the impact of a nomination on a new
writer can be profound. It's hard for any writer to know exactly how she is
doing, once she starts selling regularly. Income doesn't necessarily tell the
story. Reviews are a crapshoot—are bad reviews worse than no reviews?
Readers may or may not check in. And there are no promotions. Nobody gets
to be Vice President of Slipstream or Project Manager for Space Opera or
Director of the Zombie Division. Yes, we have to believe in ourselves and
know in our hearts that what we have to say is worth saying, but it helps
when our colleagues offer some validation. Best-of-the-year editors certainly
have this power, but they are individuals whose sensibilities are theirs alone.
But when an organization of your colleagues proclaims to the world that you
have written an elite story, you have to believe them. I think that helps the
next time your curl your fingers over a keyboard.
And that's precisely why there is so much kvetching about the Nebulas.
They matter. If we get it wrong, if the process of nominating stories and
anointing one of the nominees does not spur the collective effort to write
better SF and fantasy, then we've lost our way. My mentor Damon Knight
would not be pleased.
I don't think this is the case, obviously. But the problem is that there is
no consensus about how to write better SF and fantasy. Do we honor stories
that are in dialogue with stories from our past, as has been our tradition, or
is all that stuff old-fashioned now? Should we seek to break down the walls
between the genres, or between genre and the literary mainstream, or is that
turning our backs on our mission? And just what is our mission? Do we even
have one? The discussions and, yes,
controversies that sometimes swirl around
the Nebulas are as important a part of our continuing self-evaluation as the
awards themselves.
John: If the impact of a nomination on a young writer can be profound, I can
say from similar personal experience that winning a Nebula can be a test of
character. When I wrote "Another Orphan," which won me a Nebula on my
first nomination, I paid less attention to marketability, and more to my own
obsessive interests than I had for any story I had written up to that point.
After I won, I spent a year spinning my wheels trying to figure out what winning
meant I should write next. What did people expect to see from me?
What was I
supposed to write? It took me some time to find myself again after
that experience.
The attention of your peers is powerful, for good or ill. As E. B. White
reminds us when Wilbur the pig wins an award at the country fair in
Charlotte's
Web, "It is deeply satisfying to win a prize in front of a lot of people."
The stress of winning causes poor Wilbur to faint dead away, for "he is
modest and can't stand praise." Fortunately, winning a prize does not mean
that Wilbur must be slaughtered and eaten; instead, he goes back to his barn
at the end and lives pretty much as he did before. Let us choose Wilbur as our
role model.
Jim: There are many paths to greatness. (Uh-oh, I'm starting to sound like a
fortune cookie!) And we would be foolish to say that being nominated for a
Nebula or even winning one was the only honor that counted in this or any
other year. It is instructive to note that two of the awards given at the Nebula
ceremony, the Bradbury and the Norton, are named for great writers who,
while celebrated as SFWA Grandmasters, have never made the short list for
the award, let alone won. That's right: Ray Bradbury and Andre Norton have
never appeared on the final ballot. Ever. And in their distinguished company
are some of the most talented writers ever to grace our genre. For example:
Iain Banks, Elizabeth Bear, Jonathan Carroll, Greg Egan, M. John Harrison,
Alexander Jablokov, Jay Lake, Kit Reed, Rudy Rucker, and Sherri Tepper—to
name but ten.
What does this tell us? Only that proximity to the stories of any given
year distorts our vision. In our opinion, these are
some of the very best stories
of 2011, but it is up to future generations of readers to decide—fifty or a hundred
years from now—which ones speak to the ages.
Until then, we are very proud to present this year's
Nebula Awards
Showcase.
(Continues...)
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