How I Would Vote Now: 1980 Hugo Awards (Best Novel)

The Nominees

The Fountains of Paradise by Arthur C. Clarke

On Wings of Song by Thomas M. Disch

Harpist in the Wind by Patricia A. McKillip

Jem by Frederik Pohl

Titan by John Varley

The Actual Results

  1. The Fountains of Paradise by Arthur C. Clarke
  2. Titan by John Varley
  3. Jem by Frederik Pohl
  4. Harpist in the Wind by Patricia A. McKillip
  5. On Wings of Song by Thomas M. Disch

How I Would Have Voted

(Abstain)

Explanation

I didn’t like any of the books this year, though none of them were particularly objectionable or bad (at least, not of the ones I read). The Fountains of Paradise just didn’t hold my interest, and I got bored and put it down. As for Harpist in the Wind, I never got to it because I ended up DNFing the first book in the trilogy, The Quest of the Riddle-Master. I wanted to like it, but I was just totally lost, especially when some of the characters were dead… maybe? Or maybe it was a dream? McKillip is clearly a beautiful writer, but writing a clear and engaging plot is clearly not her strength.

As for the other three, I screened them for objectionable content with AI, and based on that, I chose not to read them. I’ve found that I have to do this with all the Hugo Award nominees because some of the books are just way beyond the pale. On Wings of Song is apparently about a 14 year old child’s supernatural sexual awakening. Titan is apparently about a bunch of libertine, pansexual astronauts on a starship making first contact (in more ways than one) and spreading free love across the galaxy. Jem is apparently about the evils of colonialism and capitalism in a world where Malthus was right and Thomas Sowell is wrong (and you thought Ayn Rand’s preaching was bad).

1980 was the tail end of the New Wave, when science fiction went totally woke before “woke” was even a thing. But by this point, the movement was already starting to feel tired. It wasn’t until the mid-80s that a lot of these toxic ideologies were in full retreat, making room for some truly great books like Ender’s Game and Hyperion. At the same time, because the movement was already starting to burn itself out, none of these New Wave books is particularly terrible. Just more of the same tired thing.

April Reading Recap

Books That I Finished

Trouble Shooter by Louis L’Amour

The Irrational Decision by Benjamin Recht

On Writing & Failure by Stephen Marche

The Coming Wave by Mustafa Suleyman

The Fellowship of the Rings by J.R.R. Tolkien

The Seven Mountains Mandate by Matthew Boedy

Rivers West by Louis L’Amour

Anna Karenina by Leo Tolstoy

Moroni’s America by Jonathan Neville

The AI-Driven Leader by Geoff Woods

The Lost Gems of Genesis by Jonah R. Barnes

Twelve Months by Jim Butcher

The Man From the Broken Hills by Louis L’Amour

Books That I DNFed

  • The Riddle-Master of Hed by Patricia A. McKillip
  • The Anatomy of Genres by John Truby
  • Boneshaker by Cherie Priest
  • Strata by Laura Poppick
  • Salt Lakes by Caroline Tracey
  • Blindsight by Peter Watts

January Reading Recap

Books that I finished

Pox Romana by Colin Elliott

Homeschooling by Ginny Yurich

Mojave Crossing by Louis L’Amour

The Cunning Man by David Butler

Writing Great Fiction by James Hynes

Elon Musk by Walter Isaacson

The Sackett Brand by Louis L’Amour

Writing the Great American Romance Novel by Catherine Lanigan

The First Year of Homeschooling Your Child by Linda Dobson

Work Pray Code by Carolyn Chen

Civil Rights by Thomas Sowell

A Revolution of Common Sense by Scott Jennings

(Side note: Why is this book excluded from the Amazon Associates program? It couldn’t possibly have anything to do with Amazon’s woke political bias, could it? Surely not!)

Rocket Dreams by Christian Davenport

The Elements of Eloquence by Mark Forsyth

While Time Remains by Yeonmi Park

The Happiness Files by Arthur C. Brooks

The Sacrament and Your Endowment by Mark A. Shields

The Sky-Liners by Louis L’Amour

Books tha I DNFed

  • The Sorceress and the Cygnet by Patricia A. McKillip
  • Status & Culture by W. David Marx
  • Virtual Light by William Gibson
  • When Homeschooling Gets Tough by Diana Johnson
  • Techniques of the Selling Writer by Dwight V. Swain
  • Why Women Read Fiction by Helen Taylor
  • The Pride of Chanur by C.J. Cherryh
  • The Origin & History of Consciousness by Erich Neumann