Arthur C. Clarke Award Winner!

The judges for the 2024 Arthur C. Clarke Award have made their decision:

Martin MacInnes, IN ASCENSION

What a great choice! One of the judges commented that this year’s choice was in the spirit of Clarke’s best fiction, and I agree. Find my review here.

It’s a wonderful novel, very deep, exceptionally well-written. I blitzed through it when I read it last month–just couldn’t put it down, in that best of all reading highs. I think it will really reward a careful re-reading, so I plan to do that.

First, though, I’m speeding ahead to consider the short-listed novels for the 2024 Hugo Awards. They will be announced on August 11. Luckily for me, I’ve already read them by now, so I’ll have plenty of time to think about which ones I liked best, and why.

The short-listed novels are:

  • The Adventures of Amina al-Sirafi by Shannon Chakraborty (Harper Voyager, Harper Voyager UK)
  • The Saint of Bright Doors by Vajra Chandrasekera (Tordotcom)
  • Some Desperate Glory by Emily Tesh (Tordotcom, Orbit UK)
  • Starter Villain by John Scalzi (Tor, Tor UK)
  • Translation State by Ann Leckie (Orbit US, Orbit UK)
  • Witch King by Martha Wells (Tordotcom)

If you’ve been following my blog posts, you’ll notice some of these novels were also short-listed for other awards, including two winners, The Saint of Bright Doors (Nebula, Locus) and Witch King (Locus).

Time for more reading!

A final two novels short-listed for the 2004 Arthur C. Clarke Award

In earlier posts, I’ve described my quest to read all the short-listed novels for the major speculative fiction awards: the Nebula, the Locus, the Arthur C. Clarke, and the Hugo. I only decided to take on this arduous task in May, though, which didn’t give me enough time to read the entire lengthy roster of Locus nominees before the award was announced. I did read all the Nebula nominees, and now I’ve read all the novels nominated for the Arthur C. Clarke Award, to be announced in a few weeks on July 24th. Here are the novels short-listed for the 2024 Arthur C. Clarke Awards, which honor the year’s best science fiction published in the U.K. On the web site, you’ll find other information about this year’s awards, as well as all the nominees in other categories.

Now I’ve read every one of the short-listed novels. Look HERE for my reviews of the first two I read, Emily Tesh’s Some Desperate Glory and Nana Kwame Adjei-Brenyah’s Chain-Gang All-Stars. Look HERE for reviews of the next two, Lavanya Lakshminarayan’s The Ten Percent Thief and Martin MacInnes’s In Ascension.

In this post, I review the final two candidates:

  • Ray Nayler, The Mountain in the Sea (MCD/Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2022)
  • Isabel Waidner, Corey Fah Does Social Mobility (Graywolf Press, 2024)

Ray Nayler, The Mountain in the Sea

Find out more HERE.

What a great read, a real novel for our times! And what a dilemma for the award-givers: two amazing novels with ocean and marine biology underpinnings. But just as Martin McInnes’s In Ascension wasn’t only about that, so this novel by Ray Nayler is about much more than frightening creatures of the deep: the nature of intelligence, the nature of communication, how to define “alien.” How to define “human.” It’s an impressive and important book. Among other accolades, it has also already won the Locus Award and has already been short-listed for the Nebula–except for 2023. It’s kind of a mystery to me why a book published in 2022 should be considered for “the best science fiction novel first published in the United Kingdom during the previous year”–unless, of course, the novel was published later in the U.K. than in the U.S.

Nayler works for a scientific institute at George Washington University. Previously, he joined the Peace Corps, did a stint at the State Department, and worked for NOAA. He clearly knows what he is talking about. I loved this book, absorbing and powerful–a warning about climate collapse, all-powerful soulless corporations, Machiavellian politics, the dangers of AI, and especially the qualities that make us human. And the amazing intelligence rivaling ours on this planet: the octopus.

Isabel Weidner, Corey Fah Does Social Mobility

Learn more HERE.

What a contrast! Waidner’s novel–if the book really is a novel–is worlds removed from Nayler’s in just about every way. Full disclosure: I’m probably not the demographic for this book. It’s very intriguing, though. I spent the first pages feeling annoyed that it wasn’t some kind of huge novel like Nayler’s that I could dive into and stay fully immersed there (sorry for all the marine metaphors!) without coming up for air. Instead, I had to read Waidner’s book in painstaking short gasps. That, it turns out, is a very unfair way to think of the book. It’s a different animal, and it demands a different reading.

Well, then. What is this book? That’s what occupied me for the next chapter or two. Is it an example of the New Weird? Is it Bizarro? Is it slipstream? Graywolf Press is known for publishing innovative literature, and Weidner’s book is nothing if not innovative. It is arch, it is political, it is extremely meta. After all, it’s about a working-class queer writer who has won a major literary award that turns out to be more of a menace than an honor. In an interview with PEN America, Waidner discusses their award-winning novel Sterling Karat Gold by stating, “I write as a working-class, queer novelist. . ., and my perspective shapes everything in the novel.”

In the interview, Waidner notes the blending of fantasy and reality in Sterling Karat Gold–an insight that works for Corey Fah as well. Abandoning my struggles to define what I was reading, I relaxed and went with it. Among the characters in this latest of Waidner’s highly-lauded novels, I found a giant spider that is somehow connected to Bambi, the Disney fawn who loses his mother and breaks the hearts of generations of children. I found worm holes sucking the characters into a time-travel Groundhog Day loop. I found oppressive, magically proliferating fast-food restaurants. I found an extended riff on the actual murder, in 1967, of gay working-class British playwright Joe Orton by his lover.

The main character, Corey Fah, keeps all these improbable narrative balls in the air via a first-person narration communicated to us in some sort of truncated syntax that raises even more questions about the absurd universe the reader has wandered into: is this the language of the vaguely dystopian future that Corey Fah and their lover Drew inhabit? Is it the author’s stylistic tic? What is it? What is this object I am holding and reading and turning the pages of? In the end, I found myself fascinated by the reading experience. Whatever that is. However I might define it. In the end, it seemed a lot more like some experimental poetry I’ve read than any of the novels on the Arthur C. Clarke Awards or any other short-list, but since it’s about a writer given an award that eludes them repeatedly, infuriatingly (I mean physically–it zips away from the pursuing winner), I can imagine at least some of the judges feeling nudged by an irresistible surreal voice: give the award to THIS.

Two Powerful Contenders for the Arthur C. Clarke Award

Any of you following this blog know that from early May, my intention has been to read as many of the novels nominated for “best” category by the four biggest speculative fiction awards as I can. I started out with the first to hold its awards announcement, the 2024 Nebula Awards, and managed to read all the short-listed novels for “best novel.” You can read my reviews of each on this blog. The 2024 Locus Award short-list, coming so soon after the Nebulas (and, more to the point, so soon after I made my resolution), was a much, much bigger challenge. How does the saying go? Too many books, too little time? I couldn’t read all of them. But at least there was a bit of overlap with the Nebula list. I had to be content with that. Meanwhile, I am sprinting to read every one of the 2024 Arthur C. Clarke Award short-listed nominees before the July 24th announcement of the winner. I came to a belated realization that I needed to add this list to my other three (Nebula, Locus, Hugo) because I’m a reader in English, and even though the Arthur C. Clarke Award only goes to a writer published in the U.K, that still covers most of the English-speaking world. One of the first two writers I’m reviewing is a U.S. writer.

Awards, of course, aren’t the be-all and end-all. For whatever reason (maybe chiefly that indie writers aren’t usually included–a bit of a self-serving complaint, since I am indie-published myself), every novel that deserves a reward isn’t on these lists. That said, the short-lists for the major speculative fiction awards are an extremely helpful way to keep up with newly published novels (also other forms) in this cluster of genres.

Onward to my first two reviews of 2024 Arthur C. Clarke Award short-listed best novels. They are all SF, no fantasy, because SF is the only genre this award recognizes.

They are, in the order I’ve read them:

Emily Tesh, Some Desperate Glory (Macmillan–Tordotcom 2023)

Nana Kwame Adjei-Brenyah, Chain-Gang All-Stars (Penguin/Random House 2023)

Emily Tesh, Some Desperate Glory

Find it here.

I suppose this novel was short-listed for the Locus best new novel award–and not just for best novel– because Tesh’s World Fantasy Award-winning Silver in the Wood is actually a novella. Now, although Some Desperate Glory did not win in its Locus Awards category, it is short-listed for both the Arthur C. Clarke 2024 Awards and the Hugo 2024 Awards for best novel. Quite an achievement.

I was puzzled by this book at first. Not that I don’t enjoy a rousing space opera, but it seemed at first like an Ender’s Game sort of book, and given other nominated books this year, I didn’t think that would be enough for a major award. There are clues right away, though, that within the space opera wrapper and the space academy trope, this book offers a pretty deep experience. The first clue is the title. Do you recognize it? It’s from Wilfred Owen’s great poem about the horrors of World War I, “Dulce et Decorum Est.” Please read it if you haven’t, or if you haven’t in a while. It’s a terrific poem. But here’s the last stanza. If you could see the horrors I’ve seen, the narrator of the poem tells us,

My friend, you would not tell with such high zest
To children ardent for some desperate glory,
The old Lie: Dulce et decorum est
Pro patria mori.

Owen’s poem quotes another poem, a famous ode by the Roman poet Horace. “Dulce et decorum est/Pro patria mori” translates “how sweet and appropriate it is to die for one’s country.” This is a poem every schoolboy in England at the turn of the twentieth century would have known as the highest patriotic sentiment. And that schoolboy, statistically speaking, was soon to have an excellent chance of dying a horrible death in the trench warfare of World War I, a war which killed off an entire generation of young English, French, and German men, among others–including Wilfred Owen himself in the last weeks of the war.

So–a first clue about Emily Tesh’s intent. And the book goes on to ratify the clue–it’s a novel of child soldiers inculcated by their cynical elders with the patriotic ardor that will lead them to their needless deaths.

The novel is more complicated than that. The epigraph to the novel is our second clue, a quotation from the ancient Greek playwright Euripedes’s great Medea: “I would rather stand three times in the battle line than give birth to one child.” That line tells us how dangerous it was to be a woman in a society with scant medical help for women giving birth, and that’s the type of society Emily Tesh’s characters inhabit. The quotation (revisited several times in the novel) also makes us wonder, the moment we see a good number of the novel’s teenaged soldiers are female: what’s about to happen to these female soldiers? What will they be called upon to do as their patriotic duty to an all-consuming state?

More clues: chapter titles, character names, many taken from heroic Nordic or Graeco-Roman heroes and gods of old. These titles and names reinforce the idea of a militaristic society. For example, the novel’s villain is named for the Roman conqueror of the British Isles. The main (female) character’s name evokes the word valkyrie. The training exercises for the teenaged soldiers take place in a virtual reality facility called the agoge– a Spartan name for the rigorous training undergone in perhaps one of the most militaristic societies of the classical world. How many fantasy and SF novels have been set in a kind of Spartan- or Roman-inspired militaristic environment? Again, if we really think about this kind of clue, it leads us to deeper questions. Why are most of the character names drawn from Nordic or Graeco-Roman mythology? What does this tell us about diversity in the world of Tesh’s novel?

I found all of these hints pretty fascinating. However–around the two-thirds mark, I was ready to quit reading. The book takes a very sharp turn. No spoilers, but I hate a book that plays tricks on the reader. I hate a St. Elsewhere ending (old, old tv reference!), and it looked to me like that’s where we were headed. Luckily, I didn’t stop reading. I was so wrong. Some readers like that trick-the-reader stuff and might eagerly read on, but if you’re like me and hate it, just. . .trust the book and keep reading.

I think it’s safe to say that every time a lesser novel might have settled for easy answers, this novel rises above them. It’s not just about young eager military trainees at the space academy. It’s not just about the horrors of war, either. It’s a very interesting read, and I can see why it was nominated for so many awards.

Nana Kwame Adjei-Brenyah, Chain-Gang All-Stars

Find it HERE.

I finished this book around an hour ago, and I don’t even know how I’m writing. I should be falling on the floor moaning in despair. This is one powerful book. It’s near-future dystopia, but it is also SF, because (unlike a book like, say, Paul Lynch’s Prophet Song) it includes plausible technology and institutions extrapolated from existing ones–but they don’t exist quite yet. Hence the nomination for the Arthur C. Clarke SF award.

The novel takes as its premise the idea that some near-future America might broadcast deadly gladiatorial-type games between convicted murderers as highly monetized reality tv. The novel takes its inspiration from a loophole in the Thirteenth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution. This loophole actually allows chattel servitude–slavery–in certain instances. That’s not science fiction. That’s fact. The exception in the Thirteenth Amendment abolishing U.S. slavery is for prisoners incarcerated for committing certain crimes. The U.S. has far and above the highest proportion of incarcerated people in the developed world, and the highest percentages of those people are drawn from minority populations. Not science fiction. Not exaggeration. Fact. It’s a national shame and blot, and it’s one of the foundational reasons for the national shame and blot that is the U.S. incarceration industry. Other writers of speculative fiction have tackled similar issues. I’m thinking of Margaret Atwood’s not very satisfying novel, The Heart Goes Last, for example. But I can’t think of any that are as powerful as this one.

A few things to know about this novel:

  1. if you are an easily distracted reader, try to get it in hard copy. The novel is peppered with footnotes, and if you are reading it in e-book form, you may find yourself repeatedly shuttling back and forth from the text of a chapter to the end of a chapter. I’m not sure about this, but I’m imagining a hard copy will be less distracting, because the footnotes will be right there at the bottom of each page. Whatever you do, don’t skip the footnotes thinking they will give you some kind of optional bonus content. They’re an integral part of the narrative fabric. And don’t be put off by the idea. Some of the footnotes are fictional, many are real, all are heart-stopping.
  2. This is a very American book about a very American problem. If you’re from another part of the world, you may not feel the horrible social consequences as much as a U.S. reader will. I’m not sure about that, being a U.S. reader myself and maybe lacking perspective. But British readers–maybe you’ve encountered Claire North’s dystopian novel 84K. Not exactly the same, but a similar kind of problem. Other parts of the world have their own horrifying social problems and will be able to empathize, I think.
  3. The premise might make you think you are in for a grittier, more adult Hunger Games. Think again.

This is such a powerful novel that right now, I can’t imagine anyone NOT giving it an award. The Locus Awards for first novel overlooked it. I can forgive that, since that award went to The Saint of Bright Doors, by Vajra Chandrasekera, which is also a very powerful and important novel. Chain-Gang All-Stars, though-wow. Along with a slew of other nominations for genre awards, this novel has been nominated for the National Book Award. That’s one of the main U.S.-based awards for literary fiction. As a reader of literary fiction, I’d say I trust that award’s judges more than I trust the judges for the Pulitzer Prize, at least where fiction is concerned. Speculative fiction doesn’t usually win that kind of award. I say that, and then I’m thinking again (always thinking about it a lot–a very, very powerful novel) of Paul Lynch’s Prophet Song, the dystopian novel that won this year’s Booker Prize.