Grand Prix de l'Imaginaire
Encyclopedia
Grand Prix de l'Imaginaire is a French award for speculative fiction
Speculative fiction
Speculative fiction is an umbrella term encompassing the more fantastical fiction genres, specifically science fiction, fantasy, horror, supernatural fiction, superhero fiction, utopian and dystopian fiction, apocalyptic and post-apocalyptic fiction, and alternate history in literature as well as...

. It originally had the word "science fiction
Science fiction
Science fiction is a genre of fiction dealing with imaginary but more or less plausible content such as future settings, futuristic science and technology, space travel, aliens, and paranormal abilities...

" in the name, but this has since been dropped.

French novel

  • 1974 : Michel Jeury
    Michel Jeury
    Michel Jeury is a French science fiction writer, reputed in the 1970's. He also used the pseudonym of Albert Higon.-Biography:Michel Jeury was born in Razac-d'Eymet....

    , Le Temps incertain
  • 1975 : Philippe Curval
    Philippe Curval
    Philippe Curval is the pseudonym of Philippe Tronche , a French journalist and science fiction writer.He first became of interest in 1962 and in 1977 won the Prix Apollo for Cette chère humanité He is also known for his works of science fiction criticism and as an editor.-External links:...

    , L'Homme à rebours
  • 1976 : Philip Goy, Le Livre machine
  • 1977 : Michel Demuth, Les Galaxiales
  • 1978 : Pierre Pelot
    Pierre Pelot
    Pierre Pelot , is a French science fiction writer. Born on November 13, 1945, in Saint-Maurice-sur-Moselle, Vosges, France.-Overview:...

    , Delirium circus
  • 1979 : Yves Remy, La Maison du cygne
  • 1980 : Daniel Walther, L'Épouvante
  • 1981 : Serge Brussolo
    Serge Brussolo
    Serge Brussolo is a French writer.-Biography:Born in Paris, Brussolo had a tormented childhood. He studied letters and psychology and wrote his first texts very early, finding inspiration in his misery and disturbed family environment...

    , Vue en coupe d'une ville malade
  • 1982 : Élisabeth Vonarburg
    Élisabeth Vonarburg
    Élisabeth Vonarburg is a science fiction writer. She was born in Paris and has lived in Chicoutimi , Quebec, Canada since 1973....

    , Le Silence de la cité
  • 1983 : Pierre Billon
    Pierre Billon
    Pierre Billon, born in Geneva in 1937, is a québécois writer.-Novels:* L'ogre de Barbarie * La Chausse-Trappe * L'enfant du Cinquième Nord * Le Livre de Seul * L'ultime Alliance...

    , L'Enfant du cinquième nord
  • 1984 : Jean-Pierre Hubert
    Jean-Pierre Hubert
    Jean-Pierre Hubert was a science fiction and detective fiction author. He won the Prix Rosny-Aîné several times and has been reviewed by Locus .-Bibliography:* Planète à trois temps, Opta, 1975...

    , Le Champ du rêveur
  • 1985 : André Ruellan
    André Ruellan
    André Ruellan is a French science fiction and horror writer who has also used the pseudonym of Kurt Steiner, Kurt Wargar and André Louvigny.-Overview:...

    , Mémo
  • 1986 : Joël Houssin
    Joël Houssin
    Joël Houssin is a French author of science fiction, fantasy, and crime fiction. Two of his novels have won the Grand Prix de l'Imaginaire. He also wrote the film Dobermann, based on his series of police novels, and created the crime/fantasy TV series "David Nolande".-External links:...

    , Les Vautours
  • 1987 : Antoine Volodine
    Antoine Volodine
    Antoine Volodine is the pseudonym of a French writer. He initially was interested in the original Association des Écrivains et Artistes Révolutionnaires. His works often involve cataclysms and have scenes of interrogations. One of his best known works is Des anges mineurs Antoine Volodine (born...

    , Rituel du mépris, variante Moldscher
  • 1988 : Serge Brussolo
    Serge Brussolo
    Serge Brussolo is a French writer.-Biography:Born in Paris, Brussolo had a tormented childhood. He studied letters and psychology and wrote his first texts very early, finding inspiration in his misery and disturbed family environment...

    , Opération serrures carnivores
  • 1989 : Joëlle Wintrebert
    Joëlle Wintrebert
    Joëlle Wintrebert is a French writer. She primarily writes science fiction, but also writes children's literature and journalism. She has won the Prix Rosny-Aîné three times, first in 1980...

    , Le Créateur chimérique
  • 1990 : Jean-Pierre Andrevon
    Jean-Pierre Andrevon
    Jean-Pierre Andrevon is a French science fiction author. He has used the pseudonym Alphonse Brutsche for novels published under the Fleuve Noir label. In addition to his regular authorship, he has written scenarios for several prominent comics artists, among others Georges Pichard and Caza,...

    , Sukran
  • 1991 : Francis Berthelot
    Francis Berthelot
    Francis Berthelot is a French science fiction writer. He won the Grand Prix de l'Imaginaire three times and the Prix Rosny-Aîné once...

    , Rivage des intouchables
  • 1992 : Joël Houssin
    Joël Houssin
    Joël Houssin is a French author of science fiction, fantasy, and crime fiction. Two of his novels have won the Grand Prix de l'Imaginaire. He also wrote the film Dobermann, based on his series of police novels, and created the crime/fantasy TV series "David Nolande".-External links:...

    , Le Temps du twist
  • 1993 : Ayerdhal
    Ayerdhal
    Ayerdhal , a French science fiction writer, was born 1959 in Lyon, France. He received the Grand Prix de l'Imaginaire in 1993 for his novel Demain une oasis and is considered one of the leading names in the current generation of French science fiction authors...

    , Demain, une oasis
  • 1994 : Pierre Bordage
    Pierre Bordage
    Pierre Bordage is a French science fiction author. He won the Cosmos 2000 prize in 1996 for his novel La Citadelle Hyponéros.Pierre Bordage is one of France's best-selling science fiction writers...

    , Les Guerriers du silence
  • 1995 : Laurent Genefort
    Laurent Genefort
    Laurent Genefort is a French science fiction writer. He was born in 1968. Considered one of the great writers of Space Opera, he wrote more than 30 novels and was quickly noticed for his ability to create realistic alien worlds and civilizations...

    , Arago
  • 1996 : Maurice G. Dantec, Les Racines du mal
  • 1997 : Jean-Marc Ligny
    Jean-Marc Ligny
    Jean-Marc Ligny is a French science fiction writer. He began in 1978 and went on to win both the Prix Rosny-Aîné and the Prix Tour Eiffel de Science-Fiction. He has done notable works of cyberpunk and space opera...

    , Inner City
  • 1998 : Serge Lehman
    Serge Lehman
    Serge Lehman is the main pseudonym of the French science fiction writer Pascal Fréjean. He has won the Prix Rosny-Aîné with the novel F.A.U.S.T. and in short fiction with Dans l'abîme and Origami. F.A.U.S.T also won the Grand Prix de l'Imaginaire...

    , F.A.U.S.T.
  • 1999 : Roland C. Wagner
    Roland Charles Wagner
    Roland Charles Wagner is a French writer of humorous science fiction. Since his professional debut in 1981, he has written around one hundred novellas and around fifty novels...

    , Les Futurs Mystères de Paris
  • 2000 : Jean-Michel Truong, Le Successeur de pierre
  • 2001 : René Reouven, Bouvard, Pécuchet et les savants fous
  • 2002 : Pierre Pevel
    Pierre Pével
    Pierre Pevel is a French writer of fantasy and science-fiction.-Biography:Pierre Pevel was born in 1968. He was a scriptwriter and author of role-playing games , before he began writing. He has written many fantasy novels under the pseudonym, Pierre Jacq, often signing his books under his real name...

    , Les Ombres de Wielstadt
  • 2003 : Michel Pagel
    Michel Pagel
    Michel Pagel is a French science fiction and fantasy writer. He is also a translator. He was first published in the fanzine Espace-Temps in 1977. He is the writer of two series; Les Flammes de la nuit and La Comédie inhumaine, as well as several novels...

    , Le Roi d'août
  • 2004 : Fabrice Colin
    Fabrice Colin
    Fabrice Colin is a French author of fantasy, science fiction, and magic realism. His 2003 novel Dreamericana won the Grand Prix de l'Imaginaire.Colin and his family lived in Boumerdès, Algeria from 1976 to 1978....

    , Dreamericana
  • 2005 : Ayerdhal
    Ayerdhal
    Ayerdhal , a French science fiction writer, was born 1959 in Lyon, France. He received the Grand Prix de l'Imaginaire in 1993 for his novel Demain une oasis and is considered one of the leading names in the current generation of French science fiction authors...

    , Transparences
  • 2006 : Alain Damasio, La horde du contrevent
  • 2007 : Catherine Dufour
    Catherine Dufour
    Catherine Dufour is a French science fiction and fantasy writer. She might be best known for Le Goût de l'immortalité, which won three awards including the Prix Rosny-Aîné.-Novels:* Quand les dieux buvaient...

    , Le Goût de l'immortalité
  • 2008 : Wayne Barrow, Bloodsilver
  • 2009 : Georges-Olivier Châteaureynaud, L'Autre rive
  • 2010 : Stéphane Beauverger, Le Déchronologue
  • 2010 Étonnants Voyageurs : Justine Niogret, Chien du heaume
  • 2011 : Michel Jeury
    Michel Jeury
    Michel Jeury is a French science fiction writer, reputed in the 1970's. He also used the pseudonym of Albert Higon.-Biography:Michel Jeury was born in Razac-d'Eymet....

    , May le Monde

French short fiction

  • 1974 : Gérard Klein
    Gérard Klein
    Gérard Klein , known also as Gilles d'Argyre, is a French science fiction writer with sociological training.He is the editor of the prestigious science fiction series Ailleurs et Demain published by Robert Laffont and of the Le Livre de poche science-fiction imprint.In his novella Les virus ne...

    , Réhabilitation
  • 1975 : Dominique Douay, Thomas
  • 1976 : Daniel Walther, Les Soleils noirs d'Arcadie
  • 1977 : Philip Goy, Retour à la terre, définitif
  • 1978 : Yves Frémion
    Yves Fremion
    Yves Fremion is a French author and former editor of the French science fiction magazine Univers. He has also edited a number of anthologies and has worked for the comic and humour magazine Fluide Glacial...

    , Petite mort, petite amie
  • 1979 : Serge Brussolo
    Serge Brussolo
    Serge Brussolo is a French writer.-Biography:Born in Paris, Brussolo had a tormented childhood. He studied letters and psychology and wrote his first texts very early, finding inspiration in his misery and disturbed family environment...

    , Funnyway
  • 1980 : Pierre Giuliani, Les Hautes plaines
  • 1981 : Bruno Lecigne, La Femme-escargot allant au bout du monde
  • 1982 : Jean-Pierre Hubert
    Jean-Pierre Hubert
    Jean-Pierre Hubert was a science fiction and detective fiction author. He won the Prix Rosny-Aîné several times and has been reviewed by Locus .-Bibliography:* Planète à trois temps, Opta, 1975...

    , Gélatine
  • 1983 : Jacques Mondoloni, Papa Ier
  • 1984 : Jean-Claude Dunyach
    Jean-Claude Dunyach
    Jean-Claude Dunyach is a French science fiction writer.-Overview:Dunyach has a Ph.D. in applied mathematics and supercomputing. He works for Airbus in Toulouse in southwestern France....

    , Les Nageurs de sable
  • 1985 : René Reouven, Un fils de Prométhée ou Frankenstein dévoilé
  • 1986 : Charles Dobzynski
    Charles Dobzynski
    -Life:His family emigrated to France, where he was barely a year old. He narrowly escaped deportation during World War II. he published his first poem in 1944, in a youth newspaper of the Resistance. In 1949, Paul Eluard presented his first poems in Les Lettres francais. On the proposal of Aragon,...

    , Le Commerce des mondes
  • 1987 : Gérard Klein
    Gérard Klein
    Gérard Klein , known also as Gilles d'Argyre, is a French science fiction writer with sociological training.He is the editor of the prestigious science fiction series Ailleurs et Demain published by Robert Laffont and of the Le Livre de poche science-fiction imprint.In his novella Les virus ne...

    , Mémoire vive, mémoire morte
  • 1988 : Francis Berthelot
    Francis Berthelot
    Francis Berthelot is a French science fiction writer. He won the Grand Prix de l'Imaginaire three times and the Prix Rosny-Aîné once...

    , Le Parc zoonirique
  • 1989 : Richard Canal
    Richard Canal
    Richard Canal is a French science fiction writer who has won the Prix Rosny-Aîné twice. He has also written a thriller titled La Route de Mandalay. He is noted for an interest in Africa and has taught there.-External links:*...

    , Étoile
  • 1990 : Colette Fayard, Les Chasseurs au bord de la nuit
  • 1991 : Raymond Milési, Extra-muros
  • 1992 : Alain Dorémieux
    Alain Dorémieux
    Alain Dorémieux is a writer and translator of French science-fiction, born August 15 1933 at Paris and died on July 26 1998 in Paris .He is best known as editor of Fiction, the leading journal of science fiction and fantasy in France until 1990, which he edited for over twenty years.He has...

    , M'éveiller à nouveau près de toi, mon amour
  • 1993 : Wildy Petoud
    Wildy Petoud
    Wildy Petoud is a Swiss science fiction writer who won the Prix Rosny-Aîné in 1993. She also wrote the story Nocturne with Emmanuel Jouanne and translated a story by Jean-Claude Dunyach for On Spec.-External links:*...

    , Accident d'amour
  • 1994 : Katherine Quenot, Rien que des sorcières
  • 1995 : Serge Lehman
    Serge Lehman
    Serge Lehman is the main pseudonym of the French science fiction writer Pascal Fréjean. He has won the Prix Rosny-Aîné with the novel F.A.U.S.T. and in short fiction with Dans l'abîme and Origami. F.A.U.S.T also won the Grand Prix de l'Imaginaire...

    , Dans l'abîme
  • 1996 : Georges-Olivier Châteaureynaud, Quiconque
  • 1997 : Serge Lehman
    Serge Lehman
    Serge Lehman is the main pseudonym of the French science fiction writer Pascal Fréjean. He has won the Prix Rosny-Aîné with the novel F.A.U.S.T. and in short fiction with Dans l'abîme and Origami. F.A.U.S.T also won the Grand Prix de l'Imaginaire...

    , Le Collier de Thasus
  • 1998 : Jean-Claude Dunyach
    Jean-Claude Dunyach
    Jean-Claude Dunyach is a French science fiction writer.-Overview:Dunyach has a Ph.D. in applied mathematics and supercomputing. He works for Airbus in Toulouse in southwestern France....

    , Déchiffrer la trame
  • 1999 : Jean-Jacques Nguyen, L'Amour au temps du silicium
  • 2000 : Fabrice Colin
    Fabrice Colin
    Fabrice Colin is a French author of fantasy, science fiction, and magic realism. His 2003 novel Dreamericana won the Grand Prix de l'Imaginaire.Colin and his family lived in Boumerdès, Algeria from 1976 to 1978....

    , Naufrage mode d'emploi
  • 2001 : Jeanne Faivre d'Arcier, Monsieur boum boum
  • 2002 : Olivier Paquet
    Olivier Paquet
    Olivier Paquet is a French political scientist and science fiction author.Paquet graduated from the Institut d'études politiques de Grenoble in 1994 and went on to complete his DEA in 1995. He completed a doctorate in political science at the institution in 2002...

    , Synesthésie
  • 2003 : Robert Belmas et Claire Belmas, À n'importe quel prix
  • 2004 : Jean-Jacques Girardot, Dédales virtuels
  • 2005 : Mélanie Fazi
    Mélanie Fazi
    Mélanie Fazi is a French novelist and translator specialising in fantasy fiction. As well as writing award-winning fiction of her own she has translated works by Lois McMaster Bujold, Elizabeth Moon, Poppy Z...

    , Serpentine
  • 2006 : Claude Ecken
    Claude Ecken
    Claude Ecken is a French science fiction writer. He was born in Alsace in 1954.-Novels:* La mémoire totale * L'univers en pièce * La peste verte * Auditions coupables...

    , Le monde tous droits réservés
  • 2007 : Sylvie Lainé
    Sylvie Lainé
    Sylvie Lainé is a French science-fiction writer. Sylvie Lainé won a Grand Prix de l'Imaginaire in 2006.-Nouvelles:* La ballade de Johny Gueux, Les Lames Vorpales n°1B, novembre 1984, et Hors Service n° 5, 1999....

    , Les yeux d'Elsa
  • 2008 : Catherine Dufour
    Catherine Dufour
    Catherine Dufour is a French science fiction and fantasy writer. She might be best known for Le Goût de l'immortalité, which won three awards including the Prix Rosny-Aîné.-Novels:* Quand les dieux buvaient...

    , L'Immaculée conception

Foreign-language novel

  • 1992 : Robert R. McCammon
    Robert R. McCammon
    Robert Rick McCammon is an American novelist from Birmingham, Alabama. His parents are Jack, a musician, and Barbara Bundy McCammon. After his parents' divorce, McCammon lived with his grandparents in Birmingham. He received a B.A. in Journalism from the University of Alabama in 1974. McCammon...

  • 1993 : Garfield Reeves-Stevens
    Judith and Garfield Reeves-Stevens
    Judith and Garfield Reeves-Stevens are a prolific husband and wife writing team, known mainly for their involvement with the Star Trek franchise. They have written several books both within and outside of Star Trek, and acted as executive story editors and co-producers on the fourth season of the...

    , Dark Matter
  • 1994 : Jack Finney
    Jack Finney
    Jack Finney was an American author. His best-known works are science fiction and thrillers, including The Body Snatchers and Time and Again. The former was the basis for the 1956 movie Invasion of the Body Snatchers and its remakes.-Biography:Finney was born in Milwaukee, Wisconsin and given the...

    , Time and Again
    Time and Again (novel)
    Time and Again is a 1970 illustrated novel by Jack Finney. The many illustrations in the book are real, though, as explained in an endnote, not all are from the 1882 period in which the actions of the book take place. It had long been rumored that Robert Redford would convert the book into a movie...

  • 1995 : Robert Reed
    Robert Reed (author)
    Robert David Reed is a Hugo Award-winning American science fiction author. He has a Bachelor of Science in Biology from the Nebraska Wesleyan University. Reed is an "extraordinarily prolific" genre short-fiction writer with "Alone" being his 200th professional sale...

    , Down the Bright Way
  • 1996 : James Morrow
    James Morrow
    James Morrow is a fiction author. A self-described "scientific humanist", his work satirises organized religion and elements of humanism and atheism....

    , Towing Jehovah
  • 1997 : Neal Stephenson
    Neal Stephenson
    Neal Town Stephenson is an American writer known for his works of speculative fiction.Difficult to categorize, his novels have been variously referred to as science fiction, historical fiction, cyberpunk, and postcyberpunk...

    , Snow Crash
    Snow Crash
    Snow Crash is Neal Stephenson's third novel, published in 1992. Like many of Stephenson's other novels it covers history, linguistics, anthropology, archaeology, religion, computer science, politics, cryptography, memetics, and philosophy....

  • 1998 : Clive Barker
    Clive Barker
    Clive Barker is an English author, film director and visual artist best known for his work in both fantasy and horror fiction. Barker came to prominence in the mid-1980s with a series of short stories which established him as a leading young horror writer...

    , Imajica
    Imajica
    Imajica is a fantasy novel by British author Clive Barker. Barker names it as his favorite of all his writings. The work, 825 pages at its first printing in 1991, chronicles the events surrounding the reconciliation of Earth, called the Fifth Dominion, with the other four Dominions, parallel...

  • 1999 : Valerio Evangelisti
    Valerio Evangelisti
    Valerio Evangelisti is one of the most popular Italian writers of science fiction, fantasy, historical novels and horror. He is known mainly for his series of novels featuring the inquistor Nicolas Eymerich and for the Nostradamus trilogy, all bestsellers translated into many languages...

    , Nicolas Eymerich, Inquisiteur
  • 2000 : Orson Scott Card
    Orson Scott Card
    Orson Scott Card is an American author, critic, public speaker, essayist, columnist, and political activist. He writes in several genres, but is primarily known for his science fiction. His novel Ender's Game and its sequel Speaker for the Dead both won Hugo and Nebula Awards, making Card the...

    , The Tales of Alvin Maker
    The Tales of Alvin Maker
    The Tales of Alvin Maker is a series of novels by Orson Scott Card that revolve around the experiences of a young man, Alvin Miller, who discovers he has incredible powers for creating and shaping things around him...

  • 2001 : Andreas Eschbach
    Andreas Eschbach
    Andreas Eschbach is a German writer who mostly writes science fiction. Even if some of his stories do not exactly fall into the SF genre, they usually feature elements of the fantastic.- Biography :...

    , Des milliards de tapis de cheveux
  • 2002 : J. Gregory Keyes, Newton's Cannon
    Newton's Cannon
    Newton's Cannon is the first novel in Gregory Keyes's The Age of Unreason series. The main protagonist for the novel is Benjamin Franklin, other key characters to the novel are James Franklin - Ben's brother, John Collins - Ben's friend, as well as Adrienne and King Louis XIV - the Sun King.-The...

  • 2003 : Jamil Nasir
    Jamil Nasir
    Jamil Nasir is an American science fiction and fantasy author born in Chicago, Illinois, United States.He has won a Grand Prix de l'Imaginaire for foreign novel and received a special citation from the Philip K...

    ,
  • 2004 : Robert Holdstock
    Robert Holdstock
    Robert Paul Holdstock was an English novelist and author best known for his works of Celtic, Nordic, Gothic and Pictish fantasy literature, predominantly in the fantasy subgenre of mythic fiction....

    , Celtika
  • 2005 : China Miéville
    China Miéville
    China Tom Miéville is an award-winning English fantasy fiction writer. He is fond of describing his work as "weird fiction" , and belongs to a loose group of writers sometimes called New Weird. He is also active in left-wing politics as a member of the Socialist Workers Party...

    , Perdido Street Station
    Perdido Street Station
    Perdido Street Station is the second published novel by China Miéville and the first of three independent works set in thefictional world of Bas-Lag, a world where both magic and steampunk technology exist...

  • 2006 : Christopher Priest, The Separation
    The Separation
    The Separation is a 2002 novel by Christopher Priest. It is an alternate history revolving around the experiences of identical twin brothers during the Second World War, during which one becomes a pilot for the RAF, and the other, a conscientious objector, becomes an ambulance driver for the Red...

  • 2007 : Graham Joyce
    Graham Joyce
    Graham Joyce is an English writer of speculative fiction and the recipient of numerous awards for both his novels and short stories. He grew up in a small mining village just outside of Coventry to a working class family. After receiving a B.Ed. from Bishop Lonsdale College in 1977 and a M.A. from...

    , The Facts of Life
  • 2008 : Robert Charles Wilson
    Robert Charles Wilson
    Robert Charles Wilson is an American-Canadian science fiction author.Wilson was born in the United States in California, but grew up near Toronto, Ontario. Apart from another short period in the early 1970s spent in Whittier, California, he has lived most of his life in Canada, and in 2007 he...

    , Spin
    Spin (novel)
    Spin is a science fiction novel by author Robert Charles Wilson. It was published in 2005 and won the Hugo Award for Best Novel in 2006. It is the first book in the Spin trilogy, with Axis published in 2007 and Vortex published in July 2011.-Plot:Set in the near future, Spin begins with the sudden...

  • 2009 : Theodore Roszak
    Theodore Roszak
    Theodore Roszak may refer to*Theodore Roszak , Polish-American sculptor and painter*Theodore Roszak , historian and author of The Making of a Counterculture...

    , L'Enfant de cristal
  • 2010 : Ian McDonald, Roi du matin, reine du jour
  • 2010 Étonnants Voyageurs : Jack O'Connell
    Jack O'Connell
    Jack T. O'Connell is an American politician and the former 26th California State Superintendent of Public Instruction, having been elected to the post in November 2002 with 61% of the vote. He was re-elected to his post by receiving a majority of the vote in the Primary election on June 6, 2006,...

    , Dans les limbes
  • 2011 : Ian McDonald, River of Gods
    River of Gods
    River of Gods is a science fiction novel by Ian McDonald. It depicts a futuristic India in 2047, a century after its independence from Britain, inhabited by ancient traditions as well as artificial intelligences, robots and nanotechnology....


Foreign-language short fiction

  • 1995 : Nancy Kress
    Nancy Kress
    Nancy Kress is an American science fiction writer. She began writing in 1976 but has achieved her greatest notice since the publication of her Hugo and Nebula-winning 1991 novella "Beggars in Spain" which was later expanded into a novel with the same title...

    , Beggars in Spain
    Beggars in Spain
    Beggars in Spain is a 1993 science fiction novel by Nancy Kress.It was originally published as a novella in Isaac Asimov's Science Fiction Magazine and as a limited edition paperback by Axolotl Press in 1991. Kress expanded it, adding three new volumes and eventually two sequels, Beggars and...

  • 1996 : Dan Simmons
    Dan Simmons
    Dan Simmons is an American author most widely known for his Hugo Award-winning science fiction series, known as the Hyperion Cantos, and for his Locus-winning Ilium/Olympos cycle....

    , The Great Lover
  • 1997 : Robert J. Sawyer
    Robert J. Sawyer
    Robert James Sawyer is a Canadian science fiction writer. He has had 20 novels published, and his short fiction has appeared in Analog Science Fiction and Fact, Amazing Stories, On Spec, Nature, and many anthologies. Sawyer has won over forty awards for his fiction, including the Nebula Award ,...

    , You See But You Do Not Observe
  • 1998 : Poppy Z. Brite
    Poppy Z. Brite
    Poppy Z. Brite is an American author. Brite initially achieved notoriety in the gothic horror genre of literature in the early 1990s after publishing a string of successful novels and short story collections...

    , Calcutta, Lord of Nerves
  • 1999 : John Crowley
    John Crowley
    John Crowley is an American author of fantasy, science fiction and mainstream fiction. He studied at Indiana University and has a second career as a documentary film writer...

    , Great Work of Time
  • 2000 : Jonathan Carroll
    Jonathan Carroll
    Jonathan Samuel Carroll is an American author primarily known for novels, which can be characterized as magic realist, slipstream or modern fantasy...

    , Uh-Oh City
  • 2001 : Terry Bisson
    Terry Bisson
    Terry Ballantine Bisson is an American science fiction and fantasy author best known for his short stories...

    , Macs
  • 2002 : Christopher Priest The Discharge
  • 2003 : Graham Joyce
    Graham Joyce
    Graham Joyce is an English writer of speculative fiction and the recipient of numerous awards for both his novels and short stories. He grew up in a small mining village just outside of Coventry to a working class family. After receiving a B.Ed. from Bishop Lonsdale College in 1977 and a M.A. from...

    , Les Nuits de Leningrad
  • 2004 : Peter S. Beagle
    Peter S. Beagle
    Peter Soyer Beagle is an American fantasist and author of novels, nonfiction, and screenplays. His most notable works include the novels The Last Unicorn, A Fine and Private Place and Tamsin, and the award-winning story "Two Hearts".-Career:Beagle won early recognition from The Scholastic Art &...

    , The Rhinoceros Who Quoted Nietzsche and Other Odd Acquaintances (as a collection)
  • 2005 : Paul Di Filippo
    Paul Di Filippo
    Paul Di Filippo is an American science fiction writer. He has been published in Postscripts...

    , Sisyphus and the Stranger
  • 2006 : Jeffrey Ford
    Jeffrey Ford
    Jeffrey Ford is an American writer in the Fantastic genre tradition, although his works have spanned genres including Fantasy, Science Fiction and Mystery. His work is characterized by a sweeping imaginative power, humor, literary allusion, and a fascination with tales told within tales...

    , Exo-skeleton town
  • 2007 : Lucius Shepard
    Lucius Shepard
    Lucius Shepard is an American writer. Classified as a science fiction and fantasy writer, he often leans into other genres, such as magical realism. His work is infused with a political and historical sensibility and an awareness of literary antecedents...

    , Aztechs
  • 2008 : Ursula K. Le Guin
    Ursula K. Le Guin
    Ursula Kroeber Le Guin is an American author. She has written novels, poetry, children's books, essays, and short stories, notably in fantasy and science fiction...

    , Four Ways to Forgiveness
    Four Ways to Forgiveness
    Four Ways to Forgiveness is a collection of four short stories or novellas by Ursula K. Le Guin. All four stories are set in the future and deal with the planets Yeowe and Werel, both members of the Ekumen, a collective of planets used by Le Guin as part of the background for many novels and short...

    (as a collection)
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