The Nebula Awards

APRIL 2009 Los Angeles, U.S.A.

Nominees and Winners

View past nominees and winners of the Nebula Award.

Novels

Virtual library of Nebula and Norton novels at Shelfari.

Pictures

View images from the 2007 Nebula Awards Ceremony.

Links

A list of links to other sites & blogs of interest.

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1977 Nebula Awards

Best Novel: Gateway by Frederik Pohl
Best Novella: Stardance by Spider and Jeanne Robinson
Best Novelette: The Screwfly Solution by Raccoona Sheldon
Best Short Story: Jeffty is Five by Harlan Ellison
Special Award: Star Wars

1976 Nebula Awards

Best Novel: Man Plus by Frederik Pohl
Best Novella: Houston, Houston, Do You Read? by James Tiptree, Jr
Best Novelette: The Bicentennial Man by Isaac Asimov
Best Short Story: A Crowd of Shadows by Charles L. Grant

Grand Master: Clifford D. Simak

1975 Nebula Awards

Best Novel: The Forever War by Joe Haldeman
Best Novella: Home is the Hangman by Roger Zelazny
Best Novelette: San Diego Lightfoot Sue by Tom Reamy
Best Short Story: Catch that Zeppelin! by Fritz Leiber

Best Dramatic Writing: Mel Brooks and Gene Wilder for Young Frankenstein
Grand Master: Jack Williamson

1974 Nebula Awards

Best Novel: The Dispossessed by Ursula K. Le Guin
Best Novella: Born with the Dead by Robert Silverberg
Best Novelette: If the Stars are Gods by Gordon R. Eklund and Gregory Benford
Best Short Story: The Day Before the Revolution by Ursula K. Le Guin

Best Dramatic Presentation: Sleeper by Woody Allen
Grand Master: Robert A. Heinlein

1973 Nebula Awards

Best Novel: Rendezvous with Rama by Arthur C. Clarke
Best Novella: The Death of Doctor Island by Gene Wolfe
Best Novelette: Of Mist, and Grass, and Sand by Vonda N. McIntyre
Best Short Story: Love is the Plan, the Plan is Death by James Tiptree, Jr

Best Dramatic Presentation: Soylent Green
Stanley R. Greenberg for Screenplay (based on the novel Make Room! Make Room!!)
Harry Harrison for Make Room! Make Room!

1972 Nebula Awards

Best Novel: The Gods Themselves by Isaac Asimov
Best Novella: A Meeting with Medusa by Arthur C. Clarke
Best Novelette: Goat Song by Poul Anderson
Best Short Story: When it Changed by Joanna Russ

1971 Nebula Awards

Best Novel: A Time Of Changes (Berkley Book: Science Fiction) by Robert Silverberg
Best Novella: The Missing Man by Katherine MacLean
Best Novelette: The Queen of Air and Darkness by Poul Anderson
Best Short Story: Good News from the Vatican by Robert Silverberg

1970 Nebula Awards

Best Novel: Ringworld by Larry Niven
Best Novella: Ill met in Lankhmar by Fritz Leiber
Best Novelette: Slow Sculpture by Theodore Sturgeon
Best Short Story: None

1969 Nebula Awards

Best Novel: The Left Hand of Darkness by Ursula K. Le Guin
Best Novella: A Boy and His Dog by Harlan Ellison
Best Novelette: Time Considered as a Helix of Semi-Precious Stones by Samuel R. Delany
Best Short Story: Passengers by Robert Silverberg

1968 Nebula Awards

Best Novel: Rite of Passage by Alexei Panshin
Best Novella: Dragonrider by Anne McCaffrey
Best Novelette: Mother to the World by Richard Wilson
Best Short Story: The Planners by Kate Wilhelm

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Winners Presented in 2008

  • Novel: The Yiddish Policeman’s Union by Michael Chabon
  • Novella: Fountain of Age by Nancy Kress
  • Novelette: The Merchant and the Alchemist's Gate by Ted Chiang
  • Short Story: Always by Karen Joy Fowler
  • Script: Pan’s Labyrinth by Guillermo del Toro
  • Andre Norton Award: Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows by J.K. Rowling

View the archives for a listing of all past winners.

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The Yiddish Policeman's Union by Michael Chabon

For sixty years, Jewish refugees and their descendants have prospered in the Federal District of Sitka, a "temporary" safe haven created in the wake of revelations of the Holocaust and the shocking 1948 collapse of the fledgling state of Israel. Proud, grateful, and longing to be American, the Jews of the Sitka District have created their own little world in the Alaskan panhandle, a vibrant, gritty, soulful, and complex frontier city that moves to the music of Yiddish. For sixty years they have been left alone, neglected and half-forgotten in a backwater of history. Now the District is set to revert to Alaskan control, and their dream is coming to an end: once again the tides of history threaten to sweep them up and carry them off into the unknown.

About the Author

Michael Chabon is the bestselling author of The Amazing Adventures of Kavalier & Clay, which won the 2001 Pulitzer Prize for fiction. He lives in Berkeley, California, with his wife, the novelist Ayelet Waldman, and their children.

Ragamuffin by Tobias Buckell

The Benevolent Satrapy rule an empire of forty-eight worlds, linked by thousands of wormholes strung throughout the galaxy. Human beings, while technically “free,” mostly skulk around the fringes of the Satrapy, struggling to get by. The secretive alien Satraps tightly restrict the technological development of the species under their control. Entire worlds have been placed under interdiction, cut off from the rest of the universe.

Descended from the islanders of lost Earth, the Ragamuffins are pirates and smugglers, plying the lonely spaceways around a dead wormhole. For years, the Satraps have tolerated the Raga, but no longer. Now they have embarked on a campaign of extermination, determined to wipe out the unruly humans once and for all.

About the Author

A professional blogger and SF/F author originally born in Grenada, Tobias currently lives in Ohio with his wife, Emily. Tobias began reading at a young age and started submitting and writing multiple short stories while in high school. He attended the Clarion Science Fiction and Fantasy workshop in 1999. He sold his first story shortly afterwards, and has since gone on to sell over 30 more. He has written and sold three novels.

The New Moon's Arms by Nalo Hopkinson

When an abandoned toddler appears on the shore of her Caribbean island home, Chastity Theresa Lambkin, aka "Calamity," becomes a foster mother in her 50s. Years previously, a one time, teenage experiment with a best friend unsure of his sexuality resulted in daughter Ifeoma. As Calamity, who narrates, now freely admits, Ifeoma bore the brunt of Calamity's immaturity, and their relationship still suffers for it. As Calamity relates all of this, things that have been missing for years inexplicably reappear, including an entire cashew tree orchard from Calamity's childhood that shows up in her backyard overnight. It could be island magic, or something much more prosaic. The rescued little boy's origins do have some genuinely magical elements (Calamity names him "Agway" after his foreign-sounding laughter), and Hopkinson's take on "sea people" and how they came to be adds depth and enchantment.

About the Author

Nalo Hopkinson a writer who has so far published a collection of short stories, four novels and an anthology or two. She has lived in Toronto, Canada since 1977, but spent most of her first 16 years in the Caribbean, where she was born.

Odyssey by Jack McDevitt

The world has discovered, despite all the promises held out by the champions of interstellar travel, that it offers few prospects for economic advantage. Public funding and private contributions for the Academy have been drying up. Even sightings of mysterious lights in the sky, once called UFO's, now known as moonriders, draw only skepticism. In an effort to recapture some of the glamor of earlier years, the Academy plans a well-publicized mission ostensibly to seek the truth about the moonriders. The mission will visit tour spots where they've been seen, while simultaneously — the real purpose of the flight — giving the general public a chance to get a good look at famous locations in the solar neighborhood.

About the Author

Jack McDevitt is a former English teacher, naval officer, Philadelphia taxi driver, customs officer, and motivational trainer. With the nominations of Infinity Beach, Ancient Shores, “Time Travelers Never Die,” Moonfall, “Good Intentions” (cowritten with Stanley Schmidt), “Nothing Ever Happens in Rock City,” Chindi, Omega, and Polaris,, "Henry James, This One's for You," and Seeker, his work has been on the final Nebula ballot ten of the last eleven years.

The Accidental Time Machine by Joe Haldeman

Since H. G. Wells' heyday, the time travel scenario has undergone so much variation that it's easy to envision the river of ideas finally running dry. But here the ever-inventive Haldeman offers a new twist: a device that travels in one direction only, to the future. Lowly MIT research assistant Matt Fuller toils away in a physics lab until one day he makes an odd discovery. A sensitive quantum calibrator keeps disappearing and reappearing moments later when he hits the reset button. With a little tinkering, Matt realizes that the device functions as a crude, forward-traveling time machine.

About the Author

Born in Oklahoma 9 June 1943. Grew up in Puerto Rico, New Orleans, Washington, D. C., and Alaska. Currently lives in Gainesville, Florida and Cambridge, Massachusetts with his wife Gay Haldeman. As of August, 2008, they will have been married 43 years.