World Fantasy Awards Coming Soon!

As promised, I have read all the novels short-listed for the 2025 World Fantasy Awards. The awards will be announced at the World Fantasy Convention, held this year in Brighton UK on Oct. 30-Nov. 2, 2025. If I only had the time, I’d read all the other nominated works, but I don’t. So I’ll do what I love most, read novels and talk about them.

Here are the short-listed novels, and my first two reviews:

The Bog Wife, Kay Chronister (Counterpoint; Titan UK)–what IS this thing? Southern/Appalachian Gothic? Magical Realism? Fascinating read.

The Bright Sword, Lev Grossman (Viking; Del Rey UK)–combined Monty Pythonesque and Malory Morte-D’Arthur-esque massive novel about the Arthurian world in decline.

The Wings Upon Her Back, Samantha Mills (Tachyon)–What if profound disillusionment causes you to lose your wings? What would you do to get them back?

I’ll review one novel per post as we all anticipate the judges’ decision, but in THIS POST ONLY, I’m mentioning two. That’s because I’ve already reviewed The Tainted Cup recently, so I’ll just give a shout-out to the novel here and point you to the review.

The Tainted Cup

Find it HERE.

Robert Jackson Bennett’s The Tainted Cup has already won one major speculative fiction award and has been nominated for another. See my review HERE.

The Fox Wife

Find it HERE.

Yangsze Choo’ s The Fox Wife delightfully combines Chinese folklore about the supernatural nature of foxes with the early 20th century historical conflict between China and Japan. The main character Snow (Ah San), a woman who is actually a shape-shifting fox, has a wry take on the world of humans that instantly charms and engages the reader. When she states, “The first rule about foxes is that you don’t talk about foxes,” she grabs me with this slyly repurposed Fight Club meme and doesn’t let go. Then, as the novel combines the magic of fantasy with the separate magic of historical fiction, I really am a goner. There’s a mystery here, a love story, the broken heart of a grief-stricken mother, and revenge, sweet revenge. Snow the Fox Wife is a marvelous storyteller into the bargain. It’s a wonderful novel. I savored every word.

COMING UP NEXT: my review of Kay Chronister’s The Bog Wife.

The Hugo Judges Have Chosen

Get it HERE

On Saturday at Seattle WorldCon, the Hugo Awards judges announced their decision, awarding the prize for best novel to Robert Jackson Bennett’s The Tainted Cup. Go to the Hugo Awards web site for all the short-listed titles in every category. I suppose they’ll post the winners there soon?

If you love mystery novels of the Sherlock-and-Watson odd couple variety, AND you love fantasy, Bennett’s novel is the book for you. See my review of it HERE.

Meanwhile, I’m reading through the list of short-listed nominees for the World Fantasy Awards, but they will not be named until late October. Look for my reviews of all the novels, coming soon. Bennett’s novel is among them!

QUICK ADDENDUM: As of Aug. 17th, my search for “Hugo Awards 2025” on the internet led to–no information on the Hugo site BUT on the Seattle WorldCon site. . . one search engine returned the awards list, and another still hadn’t put up the page with the list, that I could find. This is a bit strange, I think. Is it me? Is it internet enshittification? It may be me. . .😵‍💫

2025 Hugo Awards: the last two finalists

The Hugo Awards for 2025 will be announced on August 16, 2025 at Seattle WorldCon.

The finalists for best novel:

Disclaimer: I review only the novels. Go to the Hugo Awards site to find all the other finalists in all the other categories.

And now, wow, two finalists from the same author, Adrian Tchaikovsky. I know nothing about awards and this awards process.* All I do is read and enjoy books. But is this going to be like the Oscars, where two Best Actor nominees from the same film cancel each other out? I hope not, because both of these novels are superb. (*Actually, if you really want to figure some of this out, HERE is a post that demystifies the process.) Neither of the two Tchaikovsky novels has won any of the year’s big speculative fiction awards yet, but they are both great candidates for this one, and both have been double nominees for two of them (Hugo and Locus). If that’s not enough, Tchaikovsky’s series The Tyrant Philosophers is also nominated in the Hugo best series category. Tchaikovsky has quite a history with the Hugo Awards. See his statement HERE about the China controversy.

Service Model by Adrian Tchaikovsky (Tordotcom)

Find it HERE.

This Tchaikovsky novel, one of the nominees for the 2025 Hugo Award for best novel, was also short-listed for both the 2025 Arthur C. Clarke Award and the 2025 Locus Award for Best Science Fiction novel. See my review HERE. It’s a delightful novel from the point of view of a robot in the C-3PO mode, but it makes a serious point sorely needed by our world, teetering on the cusp of AI takeover. What is the difference between following a procedure and thinking? What happens when the world is run almost solely by procedure? Readers of speculative fiction are encountering a lot of robot lit these days, everything from the novel that did win this year’s Arthur C. Clarke Award (Sierra Greer’s Annie Bot, reviewed HERE) to kiddie fare like the Pixar animated film Wall-E and the beloved children’s book The Wild Robot (for the animated movie, see HERE). Tchaikovsky’s novel is a brilliant addition.

Alien Clay by Adrian Tchaikovsky (Orbit US, Tor UK)

Find out more HERE.

Here’s the other Tchaikovsky novel nominated for this year’s 2025 Hugo Award for best novel. It was also short-listed for the 2025 Locus Award for Best Science Fiction novel. It is an astounding novel of the prison camp/dystopian fascist society type, and it is powerful. But it is more than that. The main character, an exobiologist/ exoecologist named Arton Daghdev, has been sent on a one -way highly dangerous trip to a penal planet. Other colleagues have gotten there before him, some have died in transit, and still others have been executed. Daghdev’s crime is to oppose Earth’s fascist government, especially its received wisdom about science. Manifest Destiny writ large drives Earth’s space exploration, and all science must support the government-approved doctrine of human intelligence that undergirds it. This perversion of science bears the Orwellian name of Scientific Philanthropy.

When Daghdev arrives on the planet Kiln, he realizes that humanity has finally discovered another intelligence. He also quickly understands that its biology does not conform to the orthodoxy Earth’s government demands: that all intelligent life must point to humanity at the pinnacle. So the secret of Kiln is being kept under wraps. Daghdev’s task, one of the less dangerous at the colony, is to help the camp’s superiors develop a plausible-sounding theory forcing Kiln’s alien biology into conformity with Earth’s approved narrative about intelligence. “Our work,” he tells the reader, “is to biology what faking a set of books for the Taxation Mandate is to accountancy. There’s the initial survey [of the alien culture]. . .and then there’s the official record.” If Daghdev does not perform this task to the satisfaction of the petty bureaucrat in charge of the colony, his chances look grim. Then again, everyone’s chances on Kiln look grim.

Tchaikovsky’s novel delves into a problem that has dogged humanity ever since the dawn of the age of science, and still does. Here in the U.S., we might recall the so-called Scopes Monkey Trial, where a court in Tennessee tried to suppress the teaching of evolution, so shocked were certain parts of the public to think that humans might have evolved from earlier hominids. Lest anyone delude themselves into thinking this controversy is a dead part of history, I will just point you to recent U.S. news and book bannings. However, even after evolution became an almost universally acknowledged theory about how human beings and human intelligence evolved, there were still people out there trying to subvert it. People still publish that old diagram of a series of knuckle-dragging apes culminating in an upright human, while evolution is more like a shrub or tree with many branchings–and that itself is a huge over-simplification. Sorry, scientists!

NOPE

Tchaikovsky’s novel is not just about the dangers of totalitarianism but also about the dangers and temptations of human beings misunderstanding their relationship with nature. It’s an exciting book about alien discoveries, alien planets, and the fiendish puzzle of busting out of a seemingly hyper-max prison (and into what? a land that will kill you?). It’s also about the human stain, human hubris. Human clay, in other words, transposed to an alien setting. It’s a wonderful novel. I sped through it, and now I am re-reading it more closely.

AND NOW–it’s time to wait for the judges’ decision on Aug. 16th. Meanwhile, there are more awards lists to repurpose into your very own 2025 speculative fiction reading list, and I’ll be reporting on those soon.