Awards

22nd Annual Chesley Awards Final Ballot

The Association of Science Fiction & Fantasy Artists has just released their list of the 22nd Annual Chesley Awards Nominees. ASFA members can download the Final Ballot here, and vote by August 10th.

Obviously, I’m thrilled that Stephan Martiniere’s wonderful illustration for the Pyr edition of Ian McDonald’s River of Godstops the list of the “Best Cover Illustration — Hardback Book.” Stephan is nominated again in the category of Award for Artistic Achievement.

Meanwhile, my dear friend and illustrator for all five of my own anthologies, John Picacio, is also up twice, for the amazing work he did on the cover of the Eos reissue of A Canticle for Leibowitzand for the cover of Interzone magazine’s 204th issue.

But beyond all that, I’m deeply honored to have shown up on the shortlist myself for Best Art Director. I don’t know if this is the first time someone from editorial has made the shortlist, but it’s got to be a rare occurrence if not a unique one. So I want to say upfront that while I’m very pleased and proud, what this nomination means is that people think our books look really damn good, and that is a credit to a great many people. Beyond the fabulous illustrators we’ve had the privilege to work with — Picacio, Martiniere, Caniglia, Brian W. Dow, Greg Bridges, Bob Eggleton, Jim Burns, Dave Seeley, among others — my parent company Prometheus Books has a fabulous art department, and one that is very patient to put up with me breathing over their shoulders to the degree that I do. Jaqueline Cooke, Grace M. Conti-Zilsberger, and Nicole Sommer-Lecht are all tremendous, very talented, and I am very grateful to them to work so hard and so well in the service of the Pyr line. What’s more, I owe an eternal debt of gratitude to Irene Gallo and John Picacio, who have both been very free with their time and their advice and are much wiser souls than I.

Now, here’s the full list:

Best Cover Illustration — Hardback Book
* Stephan Martiniere, “River of Gods”, by Ian McDonald, Pyr, Mar 2006
* Jon Foster, “The Demon and the City”, by Liz Williams, Night Shade Books, Aug 2006
* Donato Giancola, “The Thirteenth House”, by Sharon Shinn, Ace, Mar 2006
* Todd Lockwood, “Temeraire: In the Service of the King”, by Naomi Novik, SFBC, 2006
* James A. Owen, “Here, There Be Dragons (Chronicles of the Imaginarium Geographica)” by James A. Owen, Simon & Schuster, Sept 2006

Best Cover Illustration — Paperback Book
* John Picacio, “A Canticle for Leibowitz”, by Walter M. Miller, Eos, May 2006
* Daniel Dos Santos, “Moon Called”, by Patricia Briggs, Ace, Feb 2006
* Vince Natale, “Queen of Attolia”, by Megan Whalen Turner, Eos, Jan 2006

Best Cover Illustration — Magazine
* Steven Gilberts, “Dark Wisdom: the Magazine of Dark Fiction”, Winter 2006
* Renee LeCompte, “Fantasy Magazine”, Summer 2006
* John Picacio, “Interzone” #204, May/June 2006
* r.k.post, “Dragon” #336, January 2006

Best Interior Illustration
* Tony Di Terlizzi, “Care and Feeding of Sprites”, by Holly Black & Tony Di Terlizzi
* Omar Rayyan, “Cricket Magazine”
* Yvonne Gilbert, “The Ice Dragon”, by George R.R. Martin, Starscape, Oct 2006
* Justin Sweet, “Kull: Exile of Atlantis” by Robert E. Howard, Del Rey, Oct 2006
* Ruth Thompson & Lawrence Allen Williams, “The Book Angels” by Todd Jordan, Sterling 2006
* Michael Kaluta, “The Orphan’s Tales: In the Night Garden” by Catherynne M. Valente, Spectra, Oct 2006
* James A. Owen, “Here, There Be Dragons (Chronicles of the Imaginarium Geographica)”, by James A. Owen, Simon & Schuster, Sept 2006

Best Color Work — Unpublished
* Jim Burns, “Dryad of the Oak”, acrylic
* Donato Giancola, “Tristan and Isolde”, oil
* Stephen Hickman, “Galadriel’s Harp”
* Michael Whelan, “Retrospection”, acrylic
* Benita Winckler, “Changing”, digital

Best Monochrome — Unpublished

* Donato Giancola, “Red Sonya”, pencil & chalk
* Stephanie Pui-Man Law, “Plum Blossoms”, ink
* Alex McVey, “Love Bites”, pencil
* Tom Fleming, “Spring”, pencil
* Joe Bellafatto, “The Great Temptation: Angel of Death”

Best Three Dimensional Art

* Laura Reynolds, “Ice Dragon”, mixed
* Gabriel Marquez, “Cthulhu V2”, porcelain
* Scott Webb, “Head over Heels”, polymert clay
* Forest Rogers, “Sea Maid’s Music”, clay and misc.
* Luke Eldridge, “Gargoyle Descending”, wire

Best Gaming Related Illustration
* Carl Critchlow “An Ill Wind Blows”
* Ralph Horsley “Thri-Keen”
* Todd Lockwood, “Dragons of Fearum”
* Richard Sardinha,”Coils of Set”
* Eva Widerman, “Seed of Undead”
* Paul & Michael Bielaczyc, “Knightly Order of Ansalom”

Best Product Illustration
* Douglas Fitch, production design for LA Opera’s,”Hansel and Gretel”
* Nathan Crowley, architectural design for the movie, “The Lake House”
* Eugenio Caballero and William Stout, production designer and conceptual designer for the movie “Pan’s Labyrinth”

Award for Artistic Achievement
* Stephan Martiniere
* John Jude Palencar
* Kinuko Y. Craft
* John Howe
* Alan Lee

Best Art Director
* Irene Gallo, Tor Books
* Matt Adelsperger, Wizards of the Coast
* Lou Anders, Pyr
* David Stevenson, Del Rey
* Jeremy Jarvis, Wizards of the Coast
* Judith Murello, Berkley Publishing Group
* Nicolas Sica, Bookspan (SFBC)
* Justin Stewart, Apex Magazine

22nd Annual Chesley Awards Final Ballot Read More »

2 Years, 4 Months and Counting…

…since we launched in March, 2005. For my edification, and not meant to be comprehensive by any means, I put together this round-up of awards, notable recommendations, recent news etc… that I could have to hand and we could file under “why we’re hot.” This is what I came up with, which looks so nice laid out in one place like this I had to post it:

“Pyr is quickly becoming the standard by which all other sci-fi imprints are judged.” – Bookgasm.com

Ian McDonald’s Brasyl:
Quill nominee, Salon.com’s Summer Reading Recommendation, Starred Review in PW, Starred Review in Booklist, A grade in SciFi Weekly, B+ in Entertainment Weekly. Ranked # 5 on the bestselling hardcover list at San Francisco-based independent genre bookstore Borderlands Books for May 2007

  • Boing Boing: “…his finest novel to date”
  • Salon.com: “…you will delight in Brasyl.”
  • Amazon’s Bookstore Blog: “McDonald deserves to be going up against most of the world’s top fiction writers, period.”
  • Sci Fi Weekly: “…hot and tropical and full of music.”
  • Publishers Weekly: “Chaotic, heartbreaking and joyous, … must-read”
  • Locus: “…without doubt one of the major SF books of 2007.”

Ian McDonald’s River of Gods (paperback available September 2007):
BSFA Award winner, Arthur C. Clarke nominee, Hugo nominee, starred review in Library Journal

  • Washington Post: “…a major achievement from a writer who is becoming one of the best sf novelists of our time.”
  • Library Journal: “Highly Recommended.”
  • Asimov’s: “A literary masterpiece.”
  • San Francisco Chronicle: “…one of the best science fiction novels published in the United States this year.”
  • Publishers Weekly: “…sure to be one of the more talked-about SF novels of the year.”

Justina Robson’s Keeping It Real (Quantum Gravity Book One)
Locus Recommended Read, Starburst Five Star Review

  • Entertainment Weekly: “”For fans of Tolkien, had he gone electric, dropped acid, and discovered tantric sex.”
  • Ain’t It Cool News: “This isn’t SF for SF readers. This is SF for a generation raised on anime, manga, and MMORPGs. This is SF for the Wii gamer. ”
  • Monsters & Critics: “This action-packed futuristic sci-fi that will appeal to techies and fantasy fans alike.”
  • Library Journal: “…skillfully builds a seamless connection between sf and fantasy in this fast-paced series opener featuring a strong, action-oriented heroine and a unique world setting.”
  • SFX: “…a novel packed with memorable characters and ideas but that doubles as holiday-reading escapism.”

Kay Kenyon’s Bright of the Sky (Book One of The Entire and the Rose):
Starred Review in Publishers Weekly, A grade in SciFi Weekly

  • Publishers Weekly: “Kenyon’s vision of a unique universe ranks with those of such science fiction greats as Frank Herbert and Orson Scott Card.”
  • Sci Fi Weekly: “”a bravura concept bolstered by fine writing; lots of plausible, thrilling action; old-fashioned heroism; and strong emotional hooks.”
  • Booklist: “…a fascinating and gratifying feat of worldbuilding… a grand epic, indeed. “
  • Library Journal: “Reminiscent of the groundbreaking novels of Philip K. Dick, Philip Jose Farmer, and Dan Simmons.”

David Louis Edelman’s Infoquake (Volume One of the Jump 225 Trilogy):
Barnes & Noble’s # 1 Editor’s Choice Top 10 SF&F Novels for 2006, John W. Campbell Memorial Award Nominee for Best Novel 2006, Bookgasm’s 5 Best SciFi Books of 2006

  • Publishers Weekly: “Bursting with invention and panache.”
  • B&N Explorations: “The love child of Donald Trump and Vernor Vinge.”
  • SFFWorld: “This may be THE science fiction book of the year.”
  • Orson Scott Card’s Intergalactic Medicine Show: “Like a more accessible Charles Stross.”
  • Asimov’s: “A high-speed, high-spirited tale of capitalist skullduggery.”

Mike Resnick’s Starship: Mutiny and Starship Pirate (5 book Starship series):
B in Sci Fi Weekly

  • Publishers Weekly: “Readers craving intelligent, character-driven SF need look no further.”
  • Analog: “…a fast, smooth, utterly effortless read.”
  • SF Reviews: “…simply pure escapism, impossible to resist by anyone who still remembers that good old fashioned sense of wonder.”
  • Sci Fi Weekly: “…good old-fashioned space adventure.”
  • Library Journal: “Snappy dialog, intriguing human and alien characters, and a keen sense of dramatic focus.”

Recent Awards & Nominations for Pyr:

  • 2007 Quill Award nominee: Ian McDonald, Brasyl
  • 2007 Hugo Award nominee – Best Professional Editor – Long Form – Lou Anders
  • 2006 World Fantasy Award nominee – Special Award, Professional – Lou Anders
  • 2006 John W. Campbell Award for Best Novel nominee – David Louis Edelman, Infoquake
  • 2006 Independent Publisher Book Award winner – John Meaney, Paradox
  • 2005 Philip K Dick Award nominee – Justina Robson, Silver Screen
  • 2006 John W Campbell Best New Writer nominee – Chris Roberson
  • 2005 John W Campbell Best New Writer nominee – Chris Roberson

Recommendations/Endorsements:

  • Locus magazine’s Recommended Reading: 2006 : Joe Abercombie – The Blade Itself, Justina Robson – Keeping It Real
  • 3 Pyr Books included in the B&N Editor’s Choice: Top Ten SF&F Novels of 2006: David Louis Edelman – Infoquake (#1), Sean Williams –The Crooked Letter, John Meaney – Resolution
  • 2 Pyr Books included in Waterstone’s Top Ten SF for 2006: Joel Shepherd – Crossover, Chris Roberson – Paragaea: A Planetary Romance
  • 3 Pyr Books included in Bookgasm’s Top Five SciFi Books of 2006 – Ian McDonald – River of Gods (#1), Joel Shepherd – Crossover, David Louis Edelman – Infoquake
  • Sean Williams, The Hanging Mountains selected as a BookSense Notable Book for July
  • Kay Kenyon, Bright of the Sky – one of four novels selected by ReaderCon “the con that assigns homework” for their attendees to read pre-convention
  • Justina Robson, Silver Screen selected for Kirkus Reviews Best SF&F Books of 2005
  • John Meaney, Paradox – #2 on Barnes & Noble’s Editor’s Choice: Top Ten SF&F Novels of 2005

Foreign Awards given to Pyr books for their overseas editions:

  • 2007 Arthur C Clarke Award nominee – Adam Roberts, Gradisil (Gollancz)
  • 2005 Arthur C Clarke Award nominee – Ian McDonald, River of Gods (Simon & Schuster)
  • 2004 British Science Fiction Association Award winner – Ian McDonald, River of Gods (Simon & Schuster)
  • Spain’s Xatafi-Cyberdark Awards. nominees: Mike Resnick, New Dreams for Old and Ian McDonald, River of Gods.

2 Years, 4 Months and Counting… Read More »

Ian McDonald’s Brasyl Nominated for Quill Awards

The nominations for the 2007 Quill Awards were announced Sunday at Book Expo America, and lo and behold, Ian McDonald’s Brasyl is a nominee in the science fiction and fantasy category! Brasyl has already been labeled “outstanding” in a starred review in Publishers Weekly, “magnificent” in a starred review in Booklist, called “extraordinary” by SFRevu, and proclaimed Ian McDonald’s “finest novel to date” in a glowing review by Cory Doctorow on BoingBoing. Obviously, we are very happy with the reception this wonderful novel is garnering and continues to get.

For those not familiar with the Quill Awards, this is the award sponsored by Reed Business Information, parent of Publishers Weekly, and The NBC Universal Television Stations. It is billed as “the only televised literary prizes.” Winners will be chosen by the Quills Voting Board, comprised of over 6,000 invited booksellers and librarians, and the Awards Program will be televised by NBC-TV’s Universal Stations on Saturday, October 27, 2007.

WNBC Anchor Perri Peltz, Publishers Weekly Editor-in-Chief Sara Nelson and Quill Awards Chairman Gerry Byrne made the announcement the last day of BEA. Cormac McCarthy’s SF novel, The Road, was included in the category of General Fiction. The full list of nominees can be found here. Congratulations to all authors.

Ian McDonald’s Brasyl Nominated for Quill Awards Read More »

Infoquake Nominated for John W. Campbell Award

Cannot begin to express how thrilled we are with this announcement:

David Louis Edelman’s debut novel Infoquake has been nominated for the John W. Campbell Award for Best Novel!

And remember, this follows Infoquake being chosen as the # 1 book in the Barnes & Noble Editor’s Choice: Top Ten SF&F Novels of 2006. For those who haven’t read Dave’s masterpiece yet, check out the website, where he has uploaded around 30,000 words of content from the book. Along with a timeline, a glossary, and host of background articles on the world of Infoquake, you can read the first seven chapters online there, or listen to the first four chapters on audio.

The award will be presented during the Campbell Conference Awards Banquet at the University of Kansas in Lawrence, Kansas. The full list of nominees:

Titan by Ben Bova (Tor)
A Small and Remarkable Life by Nick DiChario (Robert J. Sawyer Books)
Infoquake by David Louis Edelman (Pyr)
Nova Swing by M. John Harrison (Gollancz)
Odyssey by Jack McDevitt (Ace)
The Last Witchfinder by James Morrow (William Morrow)
Living Next Door to the God of Love by Justina Robson (Tor)
Dry by Barbara Sapergia (Coteau Books)
Sun of Suns by Karl Schroeder (Tor)
Glasshouse by Charles Stross (Ace)
Rainbow’s End by Vernor Vinge (Tor)
Farthing by Jo Walton (Tor)
Blindsight by Peter Watts (Tor)

Nice company to be keeping. Congratulations to David and to all the nominees.

Infoquake Nominated for John W. Campbell Award Read More »

Spain’s Xatafi-Cyberdark Awards

Two Pyr books, or at least foreign translations of books Pyr published in English, are nominations in Spain’s Xatafi-Cyberdark Awards. The books in question are Mike Resnick’s New Dreams for Old and Ian McDonald’s River of Gods. They are joined by Axiomatic by Greg Egan, Lies of Locke Lamora, by Scott Lynch; Cloud Atlas by David Mitchell, and Kafka in the Shore by Haruki Murakami. Congratulations to all nominees!

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Matrix Magazine on the Clarke Award

With the Arthur C. Clarke Award winner to be announced later this week, Matrix Magazine has a chat with the shortlisted authors, including Gradisil author Adam Roberts, who says, “Gradisil felt to me like a book that was doing more of the things I’m interested in doing, art-wise, that any previous novel I’ve written.”

The article contains some interesting thoughts on the value and purpose of awards, including this bit of wisdom from M. John Harrison: “As an assessment of fiction, they offer an alternative to market forces… They’re often an index of what we feel fiction could be, rather than what it is… Well thought-out, well-given awards are about change.”

The shortlisted novels for the 2007 Arthur C. Clarke Award are:

End of the World Blues: Jon Courtenay Grimwood – Gollancz
Nova Swing: M. John Harrison – Gollancz
Oh Pure and Radiant Heart: Lydia Millet – William Heinemann
Hav: Jan Morris – Faber & Faber
Gradisil: Adam Roberts – Gollancz
Streaking: Brian Stableford – P.S. Publishing

Winners will be announced May 2nd at Sci-Fi London, the 6th annual international festival of science fiction and fantastic film.

Matrix Magazine on the Clarke Award Read More »

Paradox wins IPPY award!

We are very proud to announce that John Meaney’s Paradox: Book One of the Nulapeiron Sequence has just won the 2006 Independent Publisher Book Award in the category of Fantasy/Science Fiction.

Congratulations to John, and also to the finalists: New Wilderness, by Brian S. Matthews (Aydy Press) and Broken: A Plague Journal, by Paul Evan Hughes (Silverthought Press)

Also worth noting, Pyr’s parent company Prometheus Books won in the category of Current Events for Feet to the Fire: The Media After 9/11, by Kristina Borjesson, and placed as a finalist in the Humor category for Republican Like Me: Infiltrating Red-State, White-Ass and Blue-Suit America by Harmon Leon, and a simi-finalist in the Science category for The Joy of Chemistry: The Amazing Science of Familiar Things by Cathy Cobb and Monty L. Fetterolf.

The full awards list, including all 60 national categories, regional categories, honorable mentions, and finalists, is online as a downloadable PDF. See also www.IndependentPublisher.com.

The 10th Annual Ippy Awards presentation ceremony will be held in Washington, D.C., during Book Expo America, Friday, May 19, 2006 – 6:30p.m. – 11:30p.m.

Paradox wins IPPY award! Read More »

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