Locus Award
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The Locus Awards are presented to winners of Locus Magazine's annual readers' poll, which was established in the early '70s specifically to provide recommendations and suggestions to Hugo Awards voters. Over the decades the Locus Awards have often drawn more voters than the Hugos and Nebulas combined. In recent years Locus Awards have been presented at an annual banquet, and unlike any other award, explicitly honor publishers of winning works with certificates.
The first Locus Award was given in 1971 for works published in 1970.
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[edit] Winners
The following authors have won the most awards in the "fiction" categories as of July 2005.
[edit] 10 or more awards
- Ursula K. Le Guin (18), Harlan Ellison (15), Dan Simmons (12), George R. R. Martin (11), John Varley (10)
[edit] 3 - 9 awards
- Connie Willis (9)
- Orson Scott Card (8), Neil Gaiman (8), Lucius Shepard (8)
- Kim Stanley Robinson (6)
- Robert Silverberg (5), David Brin (5), Gene Wolfe (5)
- Isaac Asimov (4), Joe Haldeman (4), China Miéville (4), Larry Niven (4)
- Michael Bishop (3), Greg Egan (3), Stephen King (3), Kelly Link (3), Lois McMaster Bujold (3), Tim Powers (3), Neal Stephenson (3)
[edit] Categories
- Locus Award for Best Novel
- Locus Award for Best Science Fiction Novel
- Locus Award for Best Fantasy Novel
- Locus Award for Best First Novel
- Locus Award for Best Short Story