goobergunch: (gates)
Fun moment today at Central Committee. Tonight was our "youth takeover" meeting, and I was chatting with a couple of the youth delegates after about some of the parliamentary occurrences that happened during the meeting. As background I mention that I'm the Parliamentarian for this year's Business Meeting of the World Science Fiction Society, fully expecting to have to explain what exactly WSFS is.

The mouth of a girl I'm talking basically drops open. Turns out she not only knows about Worldcon, but really wanted to go this year. I tell her about Seattle and (hopefully) Los Angeles which should be a bit easier for her to get to. (She's a big fan of GRRM and Dune.)

Sometimes it's really nice to be reminded that yes, you did grow up to be the cool adult.

goobergunch: (tardis)
Since we finished all of this year’s business at yesterday’s Business Meeting, I got to sleep in a little bit before heading to the convention. I got my copy of Ada Palmer’s Perhaps the Stars signed and said my goodbyes to various fans. (Geri Sullivan organized a fun game with Fan GoH Ben Yalow that involved fans giving him copies of an illustrated Roberts Rules of Order, each of which corresponded to one of the 51 Worldcons he’s attended. I gave him the 1977 copy.) Then I headed off to the airport. Annoyingly, my flight got delayed an hour so I probably could have made Closing Ceremonies. I'll get to them one of these years....

Besides the delay, my flights home (I had a layover in Atlanta) were uneventful except that being stuck in a middle seat cross-country is terrible on my knees. The things I do for comparatively cheap tickets, huh?
goobergunch: (mountain)
After finally getting to sleep last night (staying up for the Sunnyvale City Council meeting, uh, may have been a mistake), I woke up this morning to discover some new information about 2023 Site Selection had been released. All I am going to say about that for now is that it’s still possible to vote in Site Selection even if you’re not at the convention if you can get somebody there to print off a copy of your ballot. There is a FedEx Office about half a mile from the Omni Shoreham for handy printing or copying services.

However, my first item on today’s agenda was to tag Point Reno, which turned out to be only about a twenty minute walk from my hotel. It’s nothing particularly special really, being the top of a hill in a Tenleytown park with obstructed views, and isn’t really even the highest ground around—there’s an artificial hill near a nearby reservoir that’s noticeably higher. But at 409 feet, it’s the highest natural ground in D.C., and counts as my 68th county(-equivalent) high point. There’s a nice little sign and large benchmark to mark the spot.

I stopped back at my hotel room to switch to a con t-shirt, then headed to the convention, with a detour to Big Planet Comics to grab a copy of Batman: Urban Legends #10. I got to DisCon at about 13:20 and was dismayed to discover that the registration line (which I had seen earlier reported as taking about an hour to traverse) had reached the lobby. It took just over an hour to get to the vaccine checkpoint (which was quick and painless for me, although I was prepared with ID and vax QR code at the ready) and then an additional fifteen minutes or so to get to the registration desk itself. That gotten finally out of the way, program book and pocket program in hand, I headed to the Exhibit Hall, which is best described as cavernous. I haven’t fully explored all of the fan tables and dealers quite yet solely because the space is just that large. I did skim through a bunch of the book dealers, and although a lot of this is window-shopping for me (Would I like that set of Book of the New Sun signed first editions? Yes. Can I afford it? No.) I did grab copies of Nancy Kress’s Beggars and Choosers (a 1995 Hugo finalist) and Meg Elison’s Big Girl Plus... (containing one of this year’s Hugo finalists). I also voted in Site Selection, and if somehow you are reading this, care about Worldcons, and haven’t voted in site selection yet, I’d really encourage you to find a way.

Soon enough, it was time for Opening Ceremonies. It was surprisingly hard for me to locate the Regency Ballroom despite the helpful maps that are posted everywhere (and in the pocket program), but fortunately I ran into a few other fans that were having the same navigational problem and somebody pointed us in the right direction. (The Omni Shoreham has, I think, six different levels, which makes figuring out whether or not a corridor leads in the right direction a bit of a challenge.) Opening Ceremonies were decently well-attended, but the room was large enough that there were plenty of seats available, particularly in the back section.

Opening Ceremonies )

After grabbing snacks and chatting a bit, I headed to the “A Closer Look at the Business Meeting Agenda” panel. The Blue Room has a maximum occupancy of 1200, but there were only eleven attendees (plus the four panelists) present when the panel started—a few more trickled in later. There was a lot of interesting discussion about the history and traditions of the Business Meeting, which unfortunately compressed the time available for talking about this year’s actual agenda, although the panel did ultimately get through all of the items. I then went up to the party floor. The only party posted on the party board for tonight was the Glasgow in 2024 party, which featured snacks, alcohol, and a nice little collection of items to showcase the TAFF vote, which opened today. After hanging out at the party for a bit, I headed back to my hotel. Best to call it an early night tonight in anticipation of a potentially interesting day tomorrow....
goobergunch: (tardis)
I woke up at 5:00 this morning—a time I usually try to pretend doesn’t exist—and drove off, through the rain, to SFO. It was time for the first in-person Worldcon in two and a half years.

My flight seemed to take forever to get going—I’m not sure whether that’s a me thing (especially since I, for once, didn’t show up to the airport right as the flight was boarding) or was actually an issue with the flight. The airplane was a big 787, and was pretty full but not entirely packed. I managed to score an aisle seat with nobody in the middle, so my ride was pretty comfortable. (I spent it solving the flight magazine’s crossword and reading Kurt Vonnegut’s The Sirens of Titan.)

I arrived at Dulles around sunset, and spent the next couple hours negotiating transit to my hotel. Since I was last in the District (June or July, 2010—has it really been over a decade?) the Silver Line was added to the Metro, so the fastest route from Dulles now involves grabbing the $5 bus from the airport to Wiehle—Reston East and proceeding from there. I took the Silver Line to Metro Center, then the Red Line to Van Ness—UDC, right near the Days Inn at which I’ll be staying until Sunday. (It’s significantly cheaper than the convention hotel.)

After divesting myself of luggage and reading Shana Worthen’s lovely “Twas the Night Before DisCon” poem, I took a brisk walk down to the Omni Shoreham, home of the convention. It’s about a half an hour walk, or a two-stop Metro ride. I was hoping to beat the registration rush, but registration wasn’t open yet, with a sign saying that it would start at 8:00 tomorrow. Then I wandered around the function room areas a bit to attempt to familiarize myself with the layout. I’m still totally going to forget where everything is when it’s time for the program, but I did get a pretty solid handle on the Palladian Ballroom, which is where the Business Meeting is going to be held. I also figured out where snacks could be purchases, although I suspect I’ll be getting a lot of my food from nearby stores.

After hanging out in the lobby for a while and chatting, I walked back to my hotel, grabbing some food on the way. I don’t know that I’ll want to walk back and forth all the time, but the walk really felt good after all of the transit.

Tomorrow: Highpointing, and the opening of the convention.
goobergunch: (tardis)
Finally got around to putting my Dublin Worldcon photos into an album.
goobergunch: (tardis)
Have a WSFS Business Meeting video.

(I pop up at about 1:40, but start at the beginning for context.)
goobergunch: (tardis)
Crossposted from Acrophilia.

The 2019 Hugo Awards were handed out on Sunday night in Dublin, Ireland, at the 77th World Science Fiction Convention. I was there, and now that I am home and have had a chance to review the detailed voting and nomination statistics, I have some thoughts.
John W. Campbell Award for Best New Writer )
Best Related Work )
Best Art Book )
Fan Categories )
Best Dramatic Presentation, Long Form )
Best Dramatic Presentation, Short Form )
Best Professional Editor, Short Form )
Written Fiction Categories )
Other Categories )

Iceland

Aug. 14th, 2019 11:34 pm
goobergunch: (Default)
Does spending four and a half hours in a country's airport count as a visit to that country?
goobergunch: (tardis)
Just booked a flight to Dublin next summer for the 77th World Science Fiction Convention. If anybody else is planning to be in Ireland in the middle of next August, let me know so we can meet up!
goobergunch: (gates)
Acquired today:

Robert's Rules of Order Newly Revised. 11th edition.
goobergunch: (tardis)
Crossposted from Acrophilia.

By now, if you care about these things you've probably heard about The Stone Sky's Hugo win for Best Novel, and the unprecedented threepeat for N. K. Jemisin's Broken Earth trilogy. The series is well-deserving of its accolades and if you haven't read it you should really get around to it sooner rather than later. (With the caveat that the series deals with multigenerational slavery and oppression—all of the content warnings you'd think apply, do.) Also, if you haven't watched Jemisin's acceptance speech (I got to watch it live!), now probably isn't a bad time to fix that.

This is where I confess that I didn't put The Stone Sky first on my ballot this year.

And the reason I didn't do so is simple: One of the factors I consider for "Best Novel" is whether a work stands by itself. Being in a series is and of itself not a flaw, but I felt that there were other novels on the ballot that were better if you hadn't read anything else.

But this isn't a one-novel issue. Of the five other novels on this year's ballot:
  • New York 2140 and Six Wakes are completely standalone.
  • Provenance is in the same universe as the Imperial Radch trilogy but is disconnected from the above. It stands alone fine.
  • Raven Stratagem is the second book in a trilogy. I personally think it would work well enough even if you haven't read Ninefox Gambit, but YMMV. (And read Ninefox Gambit.)
  • The Collapsing Empire is the first book in a series of at least two books.

I downranked The Collapsing Empire on my ballot for being almost entirely setup and deferring most of the resolution to the next book. Given that it placed second in the voting, I'm going to guess that most voters don't share my complaints about incomplete works. (But I will still make them.)

Last year was similar:
  • All the Birds in the Sky is completely standalone.
  • A Closed and Common Orbit is a sequel, but you don't need to have read A Long Way to a Small, Angry Planet first. (Although it spoils what happens to one of the latter's characters.)
  • Ninefox Gambit is the first in a trilogy.
  • Death's End is the third in a trilogy.
  • The Obelisk Gate is, of course, the second in a trilogy.
  • Too Like the Lightning is the first in a four-book series, but more importantly, it's almost inseparable from Seven Surrenders.

I think the Terra Ignota universe is definitely worthy of being Hugo-nominated, but I would have much rather seen Too Like the Lightning / Seven Surrenders been nominated as one work under Subsection 3.2.4 of the WSFS Constitution. However, with a couple notable exceptions (Blackout / All Clear, The Wheel of Time), most books are nominated as novels and not as "works appearing in a number of parts", and I can't blame people for doing the thing that makes intuitive sense. Heck, I could go back to the 1980s and argue that Gene Wolfe's Book of the New Sun should have been nominated similarly (setting aside that this may only have been possible since 1998, depending on interpretation).

Of course, starting last year we have a Best Series Award! But so far that has mostly posed its own problems. N. K. Jemisin declined a nomination for The Broken Earth on the grounds that it wasn't really fair to have multiple shots at an award for the same work, and while I would have happily voted for it, I do think she's got a fair point that we shouldn't just be using Best Series to award works we've already awarded. Indeed, the first two winners of Best Series have been Lois McMaster Bujold's Vorkosigan Saga and World of the Five Gods. Both of these awards felt to some extent more about recognizing the past than the present; Vorkosigan won Hugos in 1990 ("The Mountains of Mourning"), 1991 (The Vor Game), 1992 (Barrayar), and 1995 (Mirror Dance), while Five Gods won a Hugo in 2004 (Paladin of Souls). Obviously the more recent eligibility hooks exist (hey, I voted for Vorkosigan too) but I'm hoping that going forward we recognize series that haven't been already recognized.

This year's Series longlist also suggests that the rule about not nominating series that were just nominated (specifically, you need at least two new installments and 240,000 new words) isn't clearly understood yet, given that all four Series finalists from last year that saw a new installment in 2017 made the longlist despite not being eligible. As far as I can tell, none of these finalists, except for October Daye, will be eligible next year either. I think the re-eligibility requirements are strict enough that it will prevent series coming back in alternating years, which would be bad for the award even if it would make voting in the category a lot easier. But I worry that we'll have to dig pretty deep down the longlist to find six eligible series next year. (On the other hand, last year's longlist only has one series that made the ballot this year. So we'll see.)

I didn't do so great in my desire for complete series, either, given that InCryptid placed second. I did find it interesting that it did significantly better than Seanan McGuire's other big series, October Daye, which placed sixth last year, even though I feel (and I don't think it's just me) that the latter is generally stronger work. I don't know whether to ascribe this to stronger competition last year, a different voting base, or just me having opinions that are out-of-step with everybody else again.

The Best Series award will face re-ratification at the 2021 Worldcon. As you can probably tell, I have a lot of mixed feelings about this award. I have concerns about its functionality but I'm also glad it led me to the likes of Martha Wells's Books of the Raksura that deserve recognition and that I may not have ever encountered otherwise . I am really interested in seeing how it plays out over the next couple years.

Some other quick notes:
  • E Pluribus Hugo impacted this year's Novel ballot by replacing The Stars Are Legion and Autonomous (which got more raw nominations) with New York 2140 and The Collapsing Empire. I liked Autonomous better than the latter two (I haven't read The Stars Are Legion yet), but I'm not going to object: besides defending against slates, one of the benefits of E Pluribus Hugo is that it ensures that more strains of fandom (at least, WSFS/Worldcon fandom) are represented and both novels have their strong supporters. (And as noted, Collapsing Empire ultimately placed second.) As I noted in a File 770 comment, one thing I found interesting is that if Raven Stratagem had received 2.58 more EPH points (and the status quo held elsewhere, which is admittedly unlikely), The Stars Are Legion would have been nominated over New York 2140.
  • The Hugo and Nebula winners this year converged in Novel, Novella, and Short Story. Meanwhile, the respective Novelette winners weren't even on the other's shortlist. I believe the last time the awards recognized the same winner in three of the four categories was 2012 (Among Others, "The Man Who Bridged the Mist", "The Paper Menagerie").
  • In light of Uncanny's well-deserved wins, I've seen some discussion about how the Editor - Short Form and Semiprozine categories allow two shots at Hugos for the same work. I've mentioned Series above, but I haven't seen much talk about how this is also a potential issue in the Graphic Story and Professional Artist categories, where Monstress won the former and Sana Takada, artist of the same, won the latter. I don't think this is anything worth addressing right now (Professional Artist is not frequently understood as a proxy award in the same way that the Editor awards are) but bears monitoring going forward.
  • This year's WSFS Business Meeting didn't make any major changes to the Hugos. The YA Award is finally named the Lodestar.
  • Judging by the longlist, the alt-right attack on the Hugos is finally over, other than their little Saturday protest. Way to protest people donating blood, dumbasses.
  • File 770 took home a well-deserved award for Best Fanzine. File 770 and its commentariat played a nontrivial role in my decision to attend Worldcon this year and it was a great pleasure to meet everybody that was at the Thursday and Friday meetups. Even if Thursday's musical experience was an unexpected horror.
  • As may be obvious from the above comment, I had a great time at Worldcon this year. Over the course of the convention I went from "eh there is probably no way I will be able to afford to go to another one until 2021" to "... I really want to make Dublin happen." I don't know if I will, but I'm already starting to glance at flight prices....

If you're interested in nominating and voting for the 2019 Hugo Awards, you can purchase a supporting membership in the 2019 Worldcon for €40 (~47 USD).

goobergunch: (tardis)
Here is N.K. Jemisin's incredible acceptance speech from earlier tonight. It was great to be in the audience for this and meet her at a book signing earlier today.

At any rate, Worldcon 76 was great and now I really want to find a way to get to Dublin next year.
goobergunch: (tardis)
Crossposted from Acrophilia.

Last year, the WorldCon business meeting approved a new Hugo Award for Best Series. What’s eligible for this award?

A multi-installment science fiction or fantasy story, unified by elements such as plot, characters, setting, and presentation, appearing in at least three (3) installments consisting in total of at least 240,000 words by the close of 2017, at least one (1) installment of which was published in 2017.


This is, by design, very open-ended. There is no requirement that a series be completed—and that’s fine, because neither the Hugo Administrator nor Hugo voters should be expected to be clairvoyant. The 1966 Worldcon voted Isaac Asimov’s Foundation trilogy a special “Best All-Time Series” award under the assumption that it would end with Second Foundation; in 1966, Foundation’s Edge and its progeny could not have been reasonably foreseen.

However, just because something can’t be legislated doesn’t mean it shouldn’t be kept in mind while nominating and voting. The standard I intend to apply is that to be worthy of a Best Series Hugo, a story must be fully satisfying even if no other installments are ever published. This does not necessarily mean a story must be conclusively over. For instance, while I can certainly imagine new installments in the Vorkosigan Saga, last year’s winner in the award’s trial run (and if Lois McMaster Bujold wants to write them I’d happily read them), my enjoyment of the series will not be diminished if Gentleman Jole and the Red Queen is ultimately the final installment. But I don’t think a series that is clearly incomplete is award-worthy, and I’m not inclined to grant credit for future work. Everybody can think of a series that started strong and then went off the rails. I’m not comfortable coming back in the future and saying “this received the Best Series Award but you need to ignore its conclusion”. I don’t even love new books getting a “Hugo-Nominated [or Hugo Winning] Series” stamp from their publisher when the Hugo electorate hasn’t had a chance to read the book yet, although I recognize that marketers are going to pull that kind of thing regardless.

I do not intend to nominate any series that does not meet this criteria, and I urge others to do likewise. I will also likely rank any clearly incomplete series nominated below No Award, although I might consider a series whose final installment is published in 2018 before the voting deadline, as such a series would be ineligible for future nomination. And yes, I fully anticipate that I will rank something I quite like below No Award.

While I strongly believe that an incomplete series isn’t award-worthy, I’m also motivated a bit by necessary reading triage. Last year’s Best Series nominations involved, if I’m counting right, 52 novels and assorted short fiction. I might be able to read all of that in the two-and-a-half months available for voting, but it would be a close call, especially given that I occasionally like to do things with my spare time other than reading. And that’s not factoring in the six novels, six novellas, six related works, the new YA award, the Campbell Award, etc. on the ballot. (Obviously I will have read some of these already, but likely not enough to make a huge difference. I also don’t think I’ve read much from 1942, and there are Retro Hugos….) While I might want to read incomplete series that end up getting nominated (recommendations are a good thing, especially when the Hugo Packet provides free samples), I’m not going to feel pressured to do so before July.

I know I’m conflating “incomplete” with “fully satisfying if no other installments are ever published”, which isn’t completely accurate. The biggest tension here is series that are unified by setting but have neither a single overarching story nor a defined endpoint. The obvious example to me is the Discworld, which I would argue to be clearly award-worthy but also didn’t “complete” until after Terry Pratchett’s death. The old quotation about recognizing people while they’re alive to enjoy it applies. Of course, the same issues with potential future quality decline apply as well. Some questions don’t have easy answers.

While it might be difficult to find satisfactory completed series every year, N. K. Jemisin’s exceptional Broken Earth trilogy is eligible for the 2018 Best Series Hugo. I’m nominating it. If you haven’t read it, I highly encourage you to do so.

Worldcon

Apr. 7th, 2017 03:19 pm
goobergunch: (tardis)
Finally got unlazy and purchased my WorldCon 75 supporting membership. Yay for the Hugos being worth voting for again.

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