amphibian, on 08 April 2020 - 02:35 AM, said:
QuickTidal, on 07 April 2020 - 11:32 PM, said:
The Hugo’s are such a circle jerk. It’s almost always the same usual suspects across the board with the odd change up or newbie thrown in.
Can’t stand it.
You have to be fucking joking. Look at the nominees.
I'm mainly talking about novels, the tv film categories are always middling to fine as usual.
I find that people like McGuire, and Hurley, both of whom I find caustic as hell personality-wise...and toxic...get nominated far too much over the years. Anders books always rub me the wrong way, she should have stuck with writing reviews at io9. and even then I feel like she was always wrong. The newbies who get nominated I feel are the buzz-worthy novels that the Hugo's can't ignore in favour of their usual suspects...like McGuire or Hurley or others.
And I guess my main thing is to contrast and compare with the GoodReads awards which are a MUCH larger pool of audience, a much more open list of noms and gets a far better variety of nominees and winners.
Here were the Fantasy nominees for 2019 GR Awards (chosen by the people, not the Hugo's people who buy a membership):
THE NINTH HOUSE by Leigh Bardugo
THE STARLESS SEA by Erin Morgenstern
FIRE & BLOOD by GRRM
THE PRIORY OF THE ORANGE TREE by Samantha Shannon
THE RED SCROLLS OF MAGIC by Cassandra Clare
THE WINTER OF THE WITCH by Katherine Arden
OF BLOOD AND BONE by Nora Roberts
STORM CURSED by Patricia Briggs
BLACK LEOPARD, RED WOLF by Marlon James
MIDDLE GAME by McGuire
TEN THOUSAND DOORS OF JANUARY by Harrow
GODS OF JADE AND SHADOW by Silvia Moreno-Garcia
KINGDOM OF COPPER by S. A. Chakraborty
DARKDAWN by Jay Kristoff
MAGIC FOR LIARS by Sarah Gailey
THE BURNING WHITE by Brent Weeks
AGE OF LEGEND by Michael J. Sullivan
A LITTLE HATRED by Joe Abercrombie
HOLY SISTER by Lawrence
THE NINTH HOUSE won.
Now, contrast and compare with the Hugo noms...there are two crossovers from the Hugos novel noms (McGuire and Harrow). This tells me that the people voting for the Hugos (World Science Fiction Society attendees...probaly in the thousands?) are the same people and vote for either their old favourites, or newbies with buzz...no middle ground. Meanwhile over 4million people vote in the GR awards and I feel it's a much more fruitful endeavour indicative of GOOD SFF, rather than buzzworthy or the authors you like.
I'm sure this is just me, but it's my opinion and that's why I have it.
Werthead, on 08 April 2020 - 12:11 PM, said:
There's always been a touch of cliqueness about the Hugos. Seanan Mcguire - inoffensively mediocre, readable but forgettable - being nominated for every book and/or series she puts out regardless of quality has always been a bit strange, and John Scalzi and Neil Gaiman (winning for under-par work whilst his really good stuff never got close to winning) before that.
Yes, agreed.
This post has been edited by QuickTidal: 08 April 2020 - 12:26 PM
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