Tuesday, March 25, 2014

Who do YOU think will win this year's Compton Cook/Stephen Tall Award?

The 2013 Cook/Tall Award Winner
The Baltimore Science Fiction Society recently released the list of the nine finalists for the 2014 Compton Crook/Stephen Tall Award. This award is given annually to recognize the best first science fiction, fantasy or horror novel of the year as selected by the membership of the BSFS.

This year’s slate of finalists includes the following books:

-          “Glyphbinder” by T. Eric Bakutis

-          “In the House Upon the Dirt Between the Lake and the Woods” by Matt Bell

-          “The Enchanted Skean” by Vonnie Winslow Crist

-          “City of a Thousand Dolls” by Miriam Forster

-          “Fire with Fire” by Charles E. Gannon

-          “The Summer Prince”  by Alaya Dawn Johnson

-          “Shh! It’s a Secret: A Novel about Aliens, Hollywood, and the Bartenders Guide” Daniel M. Kimmel

-          “Ancillary Justice” by Ann Leckie

This year’s winner will be announced at Balticon 48, which will be held May 23-26.


The Compton Cook/Stephen Tall Memorial Award has been awarded annually since 1983 and is given each year at the Balticon SM convention. The Compton Cook/Stephen Tall Award is sometimes called “The Compton Cook Award” because Stephen Tall was the pen name of Baltimore science fiction author Compton Cook, who died in 1981.

1983 – “Courtship Rite” by Donald Kingsbury
1984 – “War For Eternity” by Christopher Rowley
1985 – “Emergence” by David R. Palmer
1986 – “Infinity’s Web” by Sheila Finch
1987 – “Doomsday Effect” by Thomas Wren
1988 – “Liege-Killer” by Christopher Hinz
1989 – “Sheepfarmer’s Daughter” by Elizabeth Moon
1990 – “The Shining Falcon” by Josepha Sherman

1991 – “In the Country of the Blind” by Michael Flynn
1992 – “Reefsong” by Carol Severance
1993 – “Fire in the Mist” by Holly Lisle
1994 – “The Drylands” by Mary Rosenblum
1995 – “Dun Lady’s Jess” by Doranna Durgin
1996 – “The Gatekeepers” by Daniel Graham Jr.
1997 – “Celestial Matters” by Richard Garfinkle
1998 – “The Merro Tree” by Katie Waitman
1999 – “The High House” by James Stoddard
2000 – “Flesh and Silver” by Stephen L. Burns

2001 – “Murphy’s Gambit” by Syne Mitchell
2002 – “Alien Taste” by Wen Spencer
2003 – “Devlin’s Luck” by Patricia Bray
2004 – “Way of the Wolf” by E.E. Knight
2005 – “Ghosts in the Snow” by Tamara Siler Jones
2006 – “Poison Study” by Maria V. Snyder
2007 – “His Majesty’s Dragon” by Naomi Novik
2008 – “One Jump Ahead” by Mark L. Van Name
2009 – “Singularity’s Ring” by Paul Melko
2010 – “The Windup Girl” by Paolo Bacigalupi

2011 – “State of Decay” by James Knapp
2012 – “Germline” by T.C. McCarthy
2013 – “Shadow Ops: Control Point” by Myke Cole

Crook, who was a native of Tennessee, only wrote three books, but he wrote a number of noteworthy short stories. His books include “The Stardust Voyages” (1975), “The Ramsgate Paradox” (1976) and “The People Beyond the Wall” (1980). His most famous short story was “The Bear with the Knot on His Tail,” which was nominated for a Hugo Award in the short fiction category in 1972. (He lost to “Inconstant Moon” by Larry Niven.)

For more information about the Compton Crook/Stephen Tall Memorial Awards, visit http://www.bsfs.org/bsfsccnu.htm.

In the end, how many of the books mentioned above have you had the chance to read? Which did you like or dislike? Which would you recommend and why? Which book above do you think is the best Compton Cook/Stephen Tall award winner of all time? Let us know in the comments section below.

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