Locus magazine announces the 2010 Locus Awards Winners
The 2010 Locus Awards winners were announced today, at the annual Science Fiction Awards Weekend in Seattle. The winners include:
Best SF Novel: Boneshaker, Cherie Priest (Tor)
Best Fantasy Novel: The City & The City, China Miéville (Del Rey; Macmillan UK)
Best First Novel: The Windup Girl, Paolo Bacigalupi (Night Shade)
Best Young Adult Book: Leviathan, Scott Westerfeld (Simon Pulse; Simon & Schuster UK)
Best Novella: ‘‘The Women of Nell Gwynne’s,’’ Kage Baker (Subterranean)
Best Novelette: ‘‘By Moonlight,’’ Peter S. Beagle (We Never Talk About My Brother)
Best Short Story: ‘‘An Invocation of Incuriosity,’’ Neil Gaiman (Songs of the Dying Earth)
Best Anthology: The New Space Opera 2, Gardner Dozois & Jonathan Strahan, eds. (Eos; HarperCollins Australia)
Best Magazine: The Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction
The Locus Award has been presented annually since 1971. It’s given to winners of Locus magazine’s annual readers’ poll. You can find the complete list of winners at Locus Online.
Congratulations to all the winners!
Graham McNeill’s novel Empire: The Legend of Sigmar (Black Library) is this year’s winner of the David Gemmell Legend Award for Best Fantasy Novel of 2009.
Corleu is an oddity, a white-haired youth in a black-haired tribe of wanderers. His family has a talent for foresight, but all he has is a knack for stories. And then one year the tribe goes south for the winter and finds itself in a marsh where time seems to stand still, where the flowers are perfect but the skies are invisible behind the mists — and no one knows how long they’ve been there. No one but Corleu notices anything wrong.
I’m not usually one for social networking. I had to be dragged on to Facebook by Bill Ward, who got tired of Black Gate not having a Facebook page and finally just 
The Smoking Land
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Sword and Sorceress I
One of my favorite books — among a host of many favorites, of course, many many favorites, collected over decades of careful reading in a wide variety of genres, it’s hard to choose, depends on the time of day, naturally, and what we’re talking about, whether you want to include non-fiction, and it’s difficult to judge pleasure reading against, you know, literature like The Sound and the Fury, which was great until the part where I quit reading and pretty much gave up. That Quentin character though, man, what a dick. Anyway. Where was I.
Paizo, publisher of the Pathfinder role playing game,