Distinguished science fiction. Screw winning (although naturally I'd like to win; I am only human, and pretending I don't dream of winning the things I'm nominated for seems needlessly coy and a little idiotic): I have been nominated for an award because I wrote something that's regarded as distinguished science fiction.
Dude. What.
Orbit, which has three books in the list of seven, has already posted a gleeful post of gleeful congratulations, which made me feel very loved. I'm seriously over the moon about this.
The full ballot for this year:
The Company Man, Robert Jackson Bennett (Orbit)
Deadline, Mira Grant (Orbit)
The Other, Matthew Hughes (Underland)
A Soldier’s Duty, Jean Johnson (Ace)
The Postmortal, Drew Magary (Penguin)
After the Apocalypse, Maureen F. McHugh (Small Beer)
The Samuel Petrovich Trilogy, Simon Morden (Orbit)
I am very excited, and very flattered, and yeah, a little hopeful, because who wouldn't be? This is amazing.
Yay.
January 11 2012, 18:32:26 UTC 5 years ago
But now I have to wonder what a PKD Award could possibly be? Is it psychedelic? It is all an illusion? Do you win it before being nominated? Or does it simply mean that once you win, you can look forward to a movie adaptation almost but not entirely unlike the book?
January 17 2012, 20:54:01 UTC 5 years ago