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Guybrush Threepwood,vendredi 01 avril 2005, 12:59 a écrit :N'y a-t-il pas des prix littéraires français, ou du moins un équivalent du prix Hugo, qui récompenseraient également les sites Internet, histoire qu'Elbakin soit récompensé comme il se doit ? :P
Si, si, le Grand Prix de L'Imaginaire qui dans sa rubrique "Prix Spécial" a déjà récompensé un site web (enfin, c'était leur hébergeur d'un autre côté :rolleyes: )Enfin, voilà, c'est une nouvelle mise à jour. Manque encore les liens vers les critiques du site, mais ça viendra dans quelques temps ! ;)

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Merci pour la mise à jour ;) Content pour le script du RdR, et c'est un joli tir groupé il me semble pour Lois McMaster Bujold B).Va falloir que je jette mes deux yeux sur le Fléau de Chalion et le Paladdin des âmes :)

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Pour les amateurs, le discours de Neil Gaiman pour la soirée des Nebula, retranscrit sur son site officiel :
The Speech I Just Gave at the Nebulasposted by Neil Gaiman 4/30/2005 11:41:00 PMWelcome, to the Nebula Awards, on this, the 40th anniversary of the founding of the SFWA. That's the Ruby Anniversary, for anyone wondering what sort of gift to give.And forty years is a very short time in the life of a genre.I suspect that if I had been given the opportunity to address a convocation of the most eminent writers of science fiction and fantasy when I was a young man – say around the age of 23 or 24, when I was bumptious and self-assured and a monstrous clever fellow – I would have a really impressive sort of speech prepared. It would have been impassioned and heart-felt. An attack on the bastions of science fiction, calling for the tearing down of a number of metaphorical walls and the building up of several more. It would have been a plea for quality in all ways - the finest of fine writing mixed with the reinvention of SF and Fantasy as genres. All sorts of wise things would have been said.And now I'm occupying the awkward zone that one finds oneself in between receiving one's first lifetime achievement award and death, and I realise that I have much less to say than I did when I was young.Gene Wolfe pointed out to me, five years ago, when I proudly told him, at the end of the first draft of American Gods, that I thought I'd figured out how to write a novel, that you never learn how to write a novel. You merely learn how to write the novel you're on. He's right, of course. The paradox is that by the time you've figured out how to do it, you've done it. And the next one, if it's going to satisfy the urge to create something new, is probably going to be so different that you may as well be starting from scratch, with the alphabet.At least in my case, it feels as I begin the next novel knowing less than I did the last time.So. A ruby anniversary. Forty years ago, in 1965, the first Nebula Awards were handed out. I thought it might be interesting to remind you all of the books that were Nominees for Best Novel in 1965...All Flesh is Grass by Clifford D. SimakThe Clone by Theodore Thomas & Kate WilhelmDr. Bloodmoney by Philip K. DickDune by Frank HerbertThe Escape Orbit by James WhiteThe Genocides by Thomas M. DischNova Express by William BurroughsA Plague of Demons by Keith LaumerRogue Dragon by Avram DavidsonThe Ship That Sailed the Time Stream by G. C. EdmonsonThe Star Fox by Poul AndersonThe Three Stigmata of Palmer Eldritch by Philip K. DickI love that list. It has so much going on – SF and Fantasy of all shapes and sizes, jostling side by side. Traditional and iconoclastic fictions, all up for the same lucite block.And if you're wondering, the 1965 Nebula Winners were,Novel: Dune by Frank HerbertNovella: "He Who Shapes" by Roger Zelazny and "The Saliva Tree" by Brian Aldiss (tie)Novelette: "The Doors of His Face, the Lamps of His Mouth" by Roger ZelaznyShort Story: "'Repent, Harlequin!' Said the Ticktockman" by Harlan Ellison... it was a good year.Forty years on and we're now living in a world in which SF has become a default mode. In which the tropes of SF have spread into the world. Fantasy in its many forms has become a staple of the media. And we, as the people who were here first, who built this city on pulp and daydreams and four-colour comics, are coming to terms with a world in which we find several things they didn't have to worry about in 1965.For a start, today's contemporary fiction is yesterday's near-future SF. Only slightly weirder and with no obligation to be in any way convincing or consistent.It used to be easy to recognise SF written by mainstream authors. The authors always seemed convinced that this was the first novel to tackle Faster Than Light travel, or downloadable intelligence, or time paradoxes or whatever. The books were clunky and proud of themselves and they reinvented the wheel and did it very badly, with no awareness of the body of SF that preceded them.That's no longer true. Nowadays things that were the most outlandish topics of SF are simply building blocks for stories, and they aren't necessarily ours. Our worlds have moved from being part of the landscape of the imagination to being part of the wallpaper.There was a battle for the minds of the world, and we appear to have won it, and now we need to figure out what we're doing next.I always liked the idea that SF stood for Speculative Fiction, mostly because it seemed to cover everything, and include the attitude that what we were doing involved speculation. SF was about thinking, about inquiring, about making things up.The challenge now is to go forward and to keep going forward: to tell stories that have weight and meaning. It's saying things that mean things, and using the literature of the imagination to do it.And that's something that each of us, and the writers who will come afterwards, are going to have to struggle with, to reinvent and make SF say what we need it to say.Anyway.Something that, after half a lifetime in this field and a lifetime as a reader, that I think worth mentioning and reminding people of, is that we are a community.More than any field in which I've been involved, the people in the worlds of SF have a willingness to help each other, to help those who are starting out.When I was 22, half a lifetime ago, I went to a Brian Aldiss signing at London's Forbidden Planet. After the signing, at the pub next door, I sat next to a dark, vaguely elfin gentleman named Colin Greenland who seemed to know a lot about the field and who, when I mentioned that I had written a handful of stories, asked to see them. I sent them to him, and he suggested a magazine that he'd done some work for that might publish it. I wrote to that magazine, cut the story down until it met their wordcount requirements, and they published it.That short story being published meant more to me at the time than anything had up to that point, and was more glorious than most of the things that have happened since. (And Colin and I have stayed friends. About ten years ago, he sent me, without the author's knowledge, a short story by someone he'd met at a workshop named Susanna Clarke... but that's another story.)So. Twenty two years ago.... Six months later I was in the process of researching my first genre book . It was a book of SF and Fantasy quotations, mostly the awful ones, called Ghastly Beyond Belief. [And here I wandered off into an extempore bit of quoting from Ghastly Beyond Belief, by me and Kim Newman, mostly about giant crabs. And space crabs too. I'm not going to try and reproduce it here, sorry.]– and I found myself astonished and delighted by the response within the field. Fans and authors suggested choice works by authors they loved or didn't. I remember the joy of getting a postcard from Isaac Asimov telling me that he couldn't tell the good from the bad in his works, and giving me blanket permission to quote anything of his I wanted to.I felt that I'd learned a real lesson back then, and it's one that continues to this day.What I saw was that the people who make up SF, with all its feuds – the roots of most of which are, like all family feuds, literally, inexplicable – are still a family, and fundamentally supportive, and particularly supportive to the young and foolish.We're here tonight because we love the field.The Nebulas are a way of applauding our own. They matter because we say they matter, and they matter because we care.They are something to which we can aspire. They are our way – the genre's way, the way of the community of writers – of thanking those who produced sterling work, those who have added to the body of SF, of Fantasy, of Speculative Fiction.The Nebulas are a tradition, but that's not why they're important.The Nebulas Awards are important because they allow the people who dream, who speculate, who imagine, to take pride in the achievements of the family of SF. They're important because these lucite blocks celebrate the ways that we, who create futures for a living, are creating our own future.

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Et il s'en tire pas mal le camarade pour faire un discours qui se doit de rendre hommage aux prix concernés ! :o (Il faut dire qu'il a bien été servi récemment :P) Il arrive même à apporter des éléments de réflexion très intéressant sur le milieu de la SF/ F... et donner espoir aux jeunes auteurs ! Envoie-lui tes manuscrits, Gillo ! :mrgreen:

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Juste un petit mot pour signaler que l'on peutvoter en ce moment pour le premier tour du PrixMerlin, qui traite de Fantasy Francophone.Le site internet a été donné page 1 de ce topicpar gorbal.N'hésitez pas à aller voter!Les prix où le public intervient, c'est bien aussi... :mrgreen:

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euh, je vote pour A vos Amours :mrgreen: (????????)sinon les prix publics c'est pas mal, surtout si on compare les résultats à ceux de type Oscars-Césars. Par-contre je présume que la corrélation avec les ventes est très forte, ce qui nuance peut-être un peu l'intérêt de la démarche.

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Retour au Prix Locus, avec les finalistes en liste pour l'édition 2005 ! :)
Locus Awards FinalistsVoting in this year's Locus Poll and Survey closed May 1st, and the winners of the Locus Awards have been determined, but this year Locus has decided to reveal, in advance of announcing the winners at this year's Westercon in Calgary over July 4th weekend, the 'finalists' in each category -- the top five finishers in each category. Finalists are listed alphabetically by author, or title. (Where six items are listed in a category, there is a tie in one of the top five positions.) Best Science Fiction Novel The Algebraist, Iain M. Banks (Orbit) Eastern Standard Tribe, Cory Doctorow (Tor) Forty Signs of Rain, Kim Stanley Robinson (HarperCollins UK; Bantam) The Baroque Cycle: The Confusion; The System of the World, Neal Stephenson (Morrow) Iron Sunrise, Charles Stross (Ace) Best Fantasy Novel The Dark Tower: Song of Susannah; The Dark Tower, Stephen King (Grant/Scribner) Iron Council, China Miéville (Del Rey) Going Postal, Terry Pratchett (Doubleday UK; HarperCollins) The Family Trade, Charles Stross (Tor) The Wizard Knight, Gene Wolfe (Tor -- 2 Volumes: The Knight, The Wizard) Best First Novel Jonathan Strange & Mr Norrell, Susanna Clarke (Bloomsbury) The Coyote Kings of the Space-Age Bachelor Pad, Minister Faust (Del Rey) Trash Sex Magic, Jennifer Stevenson (Small Beer) The Year of Our War, Steph Swainston (Gollancz; Eos 2005) City of Pearl, Karen Traviss (Eos) Best Young Adult Book Abarat: Days of Magic, Nights of War, Clive Barker (HarperCollins) The Faery Reel: Tales from the Twilight Realm, Ellen Datlow & Terri Windling, eds. (Viking) The Blue Girl, Charles de Lint (Viking) Gifts, Ursula K. Le Guin (Harcourt) A Hat Full of Sky, Terry Pratchett (Doubleday UK; HarperCollins) Best Novella Baxter, Stephen, Mayflower II (PS Publishing) Denton, Bradley, "Sergeant Chip" (F&SF 9/04) Shepard, Lucius, Viator (Night Shade) Stross, Charles, "The Concrete Jungle" (The Atrocity Archives) Wolfe, Gene, "Golden City Far" (Flights) Best Novelette Baxter, Stephen, "PeriAndry's Quest" (Analog 6/04) Beagle, Peter S., "Quarry" (F&SF 5/04) Kelly, James Patrick, "Men are Trouble" (Asimov's 6/04) Link, Kelly "The Faery Handbag" (The Faery Reel) Miéville, China, "Reports of Certain Events in London" (McSweeney's Enchanted Chamber of Astonishing Stories) VanderMeer, Jeff, "Three Days in a Border Town" (Polyphony 4) Best Short Story Ford, Jeffrey, "The Annals of Eelin-Ok" (The Faery Reel) Gaiman, Neil, "Forbidden Brides of the Faceless Slaves in the Nameless House of the Night of Dread Desire" (Gothic!) Miéville, China, "'Tis the Season" (Socialist Review 12/04) Waldrop, Howard, "The Wolf-man of Alcatraz" (Sci Fiction 9/22/04) Wolfe, Gene, "Pulp Cover" (Asimov's 3/04) Best Magazine (Locus excluded) Analog Science Fiction, Science Fact Asimov's Science Fiction The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction Realms of Fantasy Sci Fiction Best Publisher Ace Baen DAW Del Rey Tor Best Anthology The Locus Awards: Thirty Years of the Best in Science Fiction and Fantasy, Charles N. Brown & Jonathan Strahan, eds. (Voyager Australia; Eos) The Year's Best Fantasy and Horror: Seventeenth Annual Collection, Ellen Datlow, Kelly Link & Gavin Grant, eds. (St. Martin's) The Year's Best Science Fiction: Twenty-First Annual Collection, Gardner Dozois, ed. (St. Martin's) Year's Best SF 9, David G. Hartwell & Kathryn Cramer, eds. (Eos) Between Worlds, Robert Silverberg, ed. (SFBC) Best Collection Mother Aegypt and Other Stories, Kage Baker (Night Shade) The Collected Short Fiction Of C.J. Cherryh, C.J. Cherryh (DAW) Phases of the Moon: Stories of Six Decades, Robert Silverberg (Subterranean; ibooks) The John Varley Reader, John Varley (Ace) Innocents Aboard, Gene Wolfe (Tor) Best Editor Ellen Datlow Gardner Dozois David G. Hartwell Patrick Nielsen Hayden Gordon Van Gelder Best Artist Kinuko Y. Craft Bob Eggleton Donato Giancola Frank Kelly Freas Michael Whelan Best Non-Fiction The Gernsback Days: A Study of the Evolution of Modern Science Fiction from 1911 to 1936, Mike Ashley & Robert A.W. Lowndes (Wildside) Ray Bradbury: The Life of Fiction, Jonathan R. Eller & William F. Touponce (Kent State) The Wave in the Mind: Talks and Essays on the Writer, the Reader, and the Imagination, Ursula K. Le Guin (Shambhala) The Annotated Brothers Grimm, Maria Tatar, ed. (Norton) Dancing Naked: The Unexpurgated William Tenn, William Tenn (NESFA) Best Art Book Alan M. Clark, The Paint in My Blood: Illustration and Fine Art (IFD) Spectrum 11: The Best in Contemporary Fantastic Art, Cathy & Arnie Fenner, eds. (Underwood) Paul Kidby, The Art of Discworld, Terry Pratchett (Gollancz; HarperCollins) Luis Royo, Fantastic Art: The Best of Luis Royo (NBM) Gahan Wilson, The Best of Gahan Wilson (Underwood)

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D'habitude, j'aime bien le magazine Locus... enfin surtout leur site internet très fourni, et qui parle de toutes les littératures de l'imaginaire et la promotion constante qui en découle.Mais là, je suis assez réservé sur cette pré-annonce. Car mis à part faire parler de soi... :( Je précise que les prix sont remis suite aux votes des lecteurs (et internautes je crois) dans une liste assez large et donc que cette liste de "finalistes" n'est qu'une réduction de cett eliste initiale, d'où ma réserve sur l'utilité de la démarche <_< Allez, vivement quand même le 04 Juillet, qu'on connaisse les gagnants !

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Clarke, Swainston, Gaiman... Ca va, il y a des noms bien connus par ici dans cette sélection. ;) Ou même Pratchett, King...Ah, dans les artbooks, The Best Of Luis Royo, eh ben, hmm... :mrgreen:

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Ah, c'est bien que la Panorama de la Fantasy soit primé par le jury, c'est une bonne reconnaissance pour un ouvrage dont tout le monde ici s'était dit satisfait et qui n'est pas si courant! :)Thys

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Je suis content de voir que le panorama illustré de la fantasy ai reçu le prix spécial du jury. Il le mérite par sa beauté et sa densité.De même, le frère initié a reçu le prix du meilleur roman étranger, ce qui devrait inciter certains à le lire peut-être. ;)

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Je remarquerai en outre le prix obtenu par Pevel (le créateur du cycle de Wielstadt B) ), pour un livre - L'élixir d'oubli - dont je n'ai jamais entendu parler (enfin, je crois....) et qui titille un peu ma curiosité.... :)Edit (après le post d'Aslan) : Mon Dieu! Le héros de la semaine est tiré de là....!! Je me disais bien que la couv' me disait quelque chose.... :mrgreen: :rouge:

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Eh bien, c'est bien tombé pour le héros de la semaine justement. :mrgreen: Content pour Clive Barker en ce qui me concerne. :) Pour le Panorama, c'est presque normal, rien que pour la quantité, mais j'aurais quand même quelques reproches...

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Merci pour la mise à jour ;) Content pour China Mieville, qui rafle deux prix, dont celui attribué au roman fantasy B) J'espère qu'Iron Council et the Scar arriveront chez nous prochainement maintenant... :sifflote:

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Oui, je vois que l'auteur du fameux Perdido Street Station se taille la part du lion dans ces récompenses! Je ne me suis pas laissée tenter par ce livre, mais tout de même, c'est une sacrée reconnaissance, je me demande, du coup, si je ne vais pas me pencher là-dessus avec un peu plus d'attention...je me demande aussi, notamment, ce que donne cet "Iron Concil".Thys