Sara Douglass Book Series Award is open to entries

The judging panel welcomes entries for the 2024 Sara Douglass Book Series Award.

The 2024 Award covers all series ending between January 2021 and December 2023. Entries for this special award close September 30, 2024. Please see more information below and on the Sara page.

ABOUT THE AWARD

  • This year, the Sara covers series ending (in original publication anywhere in the world) between January 2021 and December 2023.
  • The current judging year is deliberately excluded. This permits an earlier submissions deadline to allow adequate time for the judges to consider all works entered.
  • The Sara Douglass Book Series Award is not an Aurealis Award as such, but a separate, special award conferred during the ceremony (like the Convenors’ Award for Excellence).

GENERAL ELIGIBILITY

  • For the purpose of the Sara Douglass Book Series Award, a “series” is defined as a continuing ongoing story told through two or more books, which must be considered as ending in one of the years covered by the judging period.
  • This award is to recognise that there are book series that are greater as a whole than the sum of their parts – that is, the judges are looking for a series that tells a story across the series, not one that just uses the same characters/setting across loosely connected books. It is anticipated that shortlisted works will be best enjoyed read in succession, with an arc that begins in the first book and is completed in the last.
  • The series may be in any speculative genre within the extended bounds of science fiction, fantasy or horror (that is, if a book would be considered on an individual basis for one of the novel, or possibly novella, categories in the Aurealis Awards, the series may be considered here).
  • The Sara Douglass Book Series Award does not replace or depose individual books being entered in the usual categories – it is a supplementary Award.
  • As is also the case with the rules for Illustrated Work/Graphic Novel and serialised novels, if a series is considered finished and entered at the conclusion of (for example) book three, but then is continued in future works, the future works *may* be entered as a series at a later point, but the first trilogy (for example), if previously entered in the Series award, may not be considered again.
    As an example – if the first three books of Sara Douglass’s Wayfarer Redemption series (Battleaxe / Enchanter / Starman) had been entered in the Sara Douglass Book Series Award in the year following the publication of the final book, the subsequent trilogy continuing the story (Sinner / Pilgrim / Crusader) could have been entered in a later year, but the first three could not be considered again as a series of six. However, if the first three books had never been considered for the Sara Douglass Book Series Award, all six could have been entered at the conclusion. Essentially, parts of an extended series may only be considered once for this Award (although as noted, individual books are still eligible for regular Aurealis Awards categories in their year of publication).
  • There is no entry fee for this special Award category, but all books must be supplied to the judging panel by the entrant (publisher or author). The judges prefer digital copies although print may be supplied.

ENTER HERE!

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2023 Aurealis Awards Winners

Silver medallion with Chimaera logo and text reading Aurealis Awards Winner

The Aurealis Awards management team, on behalf of the Canberra Speculative Fiction Guild, would like to congratulate the winners of this year’s Awards. We also take this opportunity to once again thank the judging panels for all their hard work making the difficult decisions of shortlists and the winning works, Continuum for generously hosting the ceremony, the CSFG committee for organising the ceremony, and all the creators and publishers who continue to make the Aurealis Awards Australia’s premier speculative fiction award each year.

BEST CHILDREN’S FICTION

Spellhound, Lian Tanner (Allen & Unwin) 

BEST GRAPHIC NOVEL / ILLUSTRATED WORK

Ember and the Island of Lost Creatures, Jason Pamment (Allen & Unwin)

BEST YOUNG ADULT SHORT STORY

“Follow The Water”, J Palmer (Where the weird things are Vol 2, Deadset Press) 

BEST HORROR SHORT STORY

“Death interrupted”, Pamela Jeffs (Body of work, Canberra Speculative Fiction Guild)

BEST HORROR NOVELLA

“Quicksilver”, J S Breukelaar (Vandal: Stories of damage, Crystal Lake Entertainment)

BEST FANTASY SHORT STORY

“12 days of Witchmas”, Tansy Rayner Roberts (Patreon, self-published)

BEST FANTASY NOVELLA

Gate sinister, Tansy Rayner Roberts (self-published)

BEST SCIENCE FICTION SHORT STORY  (TIE)

“Hollywood animals”, Corey J White (Interzone #295)

“Customer service”, Emily Wyeth (Mother’s milk, Sempiternal House)

BEST SCIENCE FICTION NOVELLA

Once we flew, Nikky Lee (self-published)

BEST COLLECTION

Firelight, John Morrissey (Text Publishing)

BEST ANTHOLOGY

The book of witches, Jonathan Strahan (Ed.) (HarperVoyager)

BEST YOUNG ADULT NOVEL

When ghosts call us home, Katya de Becerra (Macmillan)

BEST HORROR NOVEL

Bunny, S E Tolsen (Pan Macmillan Australia)

BEST FANTASY NOVEL 

The will of the many, James Islington (Text Publishing)

BEST SCIENCE FICTION NOVEL

Time of the cat, Tansy Rayner Roberts (self-published)

CONVENORS’ AWARD FOR EXCELLENCE 

“Science fiction for hire? Notes towards an emerging practice of creative futurism” by Helen Marshall, Kathleen Jennings & Joanne Anderton (Text Journal of Writing and Writing Courses, 27(2))

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2023 Convenors’ Award for Excellence nominations

Each year we make the eligible nominations received for the annual Convenors’ Award for Excellence public. There are several reasons for this:

  • There is no shortlist announced, so it feels right to recognise the nominations;
  • These are items you may not otherwise have come across, so we’d like to make sure you know about them;
  • It may help people figure out what might be eligible in future.

It is very important to note that this list is NOT a shortlist – it is simply a list of the eligible entries we received for the Award this year (please note also that these can be self-nominated). The convenors consider all eligible entries in deciding the winner, but there is no shortlist generated, and only the winner will be presented at the ceremony.

A reminder what this award is for:

The Convenors’ Award for Excellence is awarded at the discretion of the convenors for a particular achievement in speculative fiction or related areas in that year that cannot otherwise by judged for the Aurealis Awards. 

This award can be given to a work of non-fiction, artwork, film, television, electronic or multimedia work, or one that brings credit or attention to the speculative fiction genres.

This year’s entries are:

      Narrelle M Harris, “A love affair: Why pros and non-pros write fic”, in SPARK (Improbable Press)

      My essay explores fanfiction’s relationship with professional writing, including the unique value of fanfiction and the significant benefits to published authors of writing it, even after they’ve become professional authors. While fanfiction is popular among fans (and dismissed by the mainstream) this short piece is designed to celebrate its strengths as a way of reflecting the diversity in real life that’s not always seen in mainstream media. The essay is part of a book of essays aimed at celebrating fandom and fanfiction, and offers an analysis of the profic/fanfic connection as part of that celebration.

      Claire Fitzpatrick (Ed.), A vindication of monsters: Essays on Mary Wollstonecraft and Mary Shelley (IFWG Publishing International)

      A Vindication of Monsters is a collection of essays about the lives of Mary Shelley and Mary Wollstonecraft. This book is a culmination of almost five years work across five countries, including a grant from the Horror Writers Association. The work is intended to assist academics, as a source for writing classes, and for general reading. This book is a detailed, in-depth examination of both women’s lives, worthy of being read by anyone interested in Mary Shelley and those around here. Winning this award would encourage future works of non-fiction on other creatives in the speculative fiction industry.

      Paul Booth (Volume Editor), Matt Hills (Volume Editor), Tansy Rayner Roberts (Volume Editor), Joy Piedmont (Volume Editor), Adventures across space and time: A Doctor Who reader (Bloomsbury)

      This significant media studies textbook is a first of its kind, collating and reprinting writings about Doctor Who from fans, academics and journalists across the 60 year history of this iconic science fiction TV show, alongside commissioned essays. Intended as a reference and teaching tool, this reader will be distributed to university libraries worldwide. The editorial team, featuring two media studies professors and two podcasters and writers from the Doctor Who fandom, includes one Australian (Dr Tansy Rayner Roberts).

      Janeen Webb & Andrew Enstice (Eds.) Aliens & Savages: The voice in Australia (Norstrilia Press)

      Aliens & Savages is an important book, a hands-on historical record that looks through the lens of speculative fiction at the racism and xenophobia that underpins Australia’s growth as a nation. First written some 25 years ago, Aliens & Savages was updated and re-issued in response to the rhetoric surrounding the 2023 proposed Voice to Parliament, providing excerpts of Australian popular writings before the advent of social media. It is our contribution to national truth telling. In it, you can hear the unguarded voices of the colonists, the squatters, the politicians; you can see the close relationship between the popular press and the prejudices of its readers; you can experience the impact of predictive science fiction on social and political decisions. From stories of the Missing Link to the Yellow Peril, sf has always been at the forefront of our national consciousness. The extracts printed in Aliens & Savages show how the marginalisation of First Nations people has been done; how it has always been done; how it is still being done. The book invites its readers to consider the evidence, and judge for themselves.

      Claire Fitzpatrick, “Introduction to A vindication of monsters – Women, horror, society, and moving forward” (The Ginger Nuts of Horror)

      I believe this essay is worthy of nomination for the convenor award for excellence, as it is an example of my writing, research, and communication ability to tell a story through facts. Both Mary Shelley and Mary Wollstonecraft are women whom I study in my own time, and I would very much like to write scholarly papers on them in the future. To win this award would demonstrate my commitment to future study on them would be a worthwhile endeavour.

      Amy Laurens, “On the origin of paranormal species” (Inkprint Press)

      This non-fiction work represents significant research and scholarship into the symbolic purpose of seven key paranormal creatures throughout different periods of history. The articles together suggest ways in which postmodernism and contemporary expectations of fiction have influenced the way paranormal creatures are represented in fictional texts, and what this reveals about the nature of our society.

      Helen Marshall, Kathleen Jennings, Joanne Anderton, “Science fiction for hire? Notes towards an emerging practice of creative futurism” (Text Journal of Writing and Writing Courses, 27(2))

      This is an academic article written by three professional speculative fiction writers (one of them me!) about a very particular kind of speculative writing. It’s what we’re calling ‘creative futurism’ — the kind of stories that are produced when writers (usually of science fiction) apply their skills to help other institutions (such as government, NGOs or defence) imagine and prepare for potential futures. The article distinguishes creative futurism from more traditional forms of speculative fiction and analyses what the difference is, and whether that matters. I think its worth nominating for the way it not only analyses this kind of writing, the uses and the practices involved in it, but also because it’s drawing attention to the impact speculative fiction can have on the ‘real’ world!

      George Ivanoff, “The best of both worlds: Fanfic & licensed fiction”, in SPARK (Improbable Press)

      The essay appears in SPARK, an anthology from the USA (edited by Atlin Merrick and published by Improbable Press). It’s not eligible for any other category.

      Jack Dann, The fiction writer’s guide to alternate history: a handbook on craft, art, and history (Bloomsbury)

      This book is an unusual and perhaps important addition to the SF genre. A comprehensive guide to the speculative sub-genre of alternate history fiction, this book maps the unique terrain of this vibrant mode of storytelling and then explains how to write it. First giving a concise conceptual overview and the critical tools to differentiate the different forms of counterfactual fiction, Jack Dann lays out the ‘tricks of the trade’ such ‘Heinleining’, how to create recognizable ‘divergent points’ and how to employ paratextual elements and ‘layering’ to overcome readers’ unfamiliarity with invented counterfactual events and cultures. Alongside this, Dann takes you step-by-step through a complete short story to demonstrate, line-by-line, how alternative history fiction works. As well as Dann’s exacting methodology for writing professional quality alternate history stories, this book also features a live-on-the-page Q&A with some of the most esteemed alternate history writers working today, including Kim Stanley Robinson, John Birmingham and Lisa Goldstein among many others, who will detail their own particular hacks, theories, processes, methods and strategies. Combining extensive and deep knowledge of the field with accessible writing advice, this is the ultimate guidebook to the broad and complex sub-genre of counterfactual and alterative history fiction.

      Andrew J. Harvey, Michael Cnudde, Leonie Rogers, Ken Vickery, HG Wells tweeting ‘The war of the worlds’ in real time (Hague Publishing)

      126 years ago, humanity faced the greatest threat to its existence with the Martian invasion. Recreated through the diaries, newspapers, and photographs of the time, and with the assistance of H.G. Wells’ seminal work (The war of the worlds), The war of the worlds in real time told the story of what really happened during that crucial month in June 1897 when the Earth stood on the precipice, and civilization teetered on the edge of extinction. The addition of new characters by Cnudde, Harvey, Rogers, and Vickery to the world of HG Wells enabled a deeper dive into the times, mores, customs, and technologies of 1897, that even without the Martians would have turned the entire world on its head over the next 10 years. Readers were able to follow the drama throughout the month of June 2023, tweet by tweet at https://twitter.com/1897WotW (@1897WotW) or post by post at http://wotw.name or https://haguepublishing.com/wotw

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      Save the Date! Aurealis Awards Ceremony announcement

      The Canberra Speculative Fiction Guild have partnered with Confound to host the 2024 Aurealis Awards ceremony (celebrating the 2023 Awards).

      When: Saturday 18 May, 2024 for a 7pm ceremony
      Where: Jasper Hotel, 489 Elizabeth Street, Melbourne (venue provided by the kind courtesy of ConFound and Continuum 16 (the 2024 Natcon).

      Thanks to the generosity of the Continuum committee, we are very fortunate to be able to invite all finalists and their guests to enjoy the ceremony at no cost. If you would like to also join in the fun of the programmed Continuum events and panels, their membership rates are available here: https://continuum.org.au/memberships/

      The Jasper Hotel is a convenient option for accommodation, but there are multiple other lovely hotels in easy walking distance!

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      2023 Aurealis Awards Shortlist Announcement

      It is with great pleasure the Canberra Speculative Fiction Guild presents the 2023 shortlists for the Aurealis Awards.

      A massive thank you to our amazing judges who have read an enormous number of entered works to bring you these excellent shortlists.

      Congratulations to this year’s finalists. The winners will be celebrated at the Aurealis Awards ceremony in May – more information to follow soon.

      NOTE: We do not publish a shortlist for the Convenors’ Award for Excellence. The eligible nominations for this special Award will be shared in a future post, with the winner announced at the ceremony.

      2023 Aurealis Awards Shortlists

      BEST CHILDREN’S FICTION

      The lonely lighthouse of Elston-Fright, Reece Carter (Allen & Unwin)

      Ghost book, Remy Lai (Allen & Unwin)

      The letterbox tree, Rebecca Lim & Kate Gordon (Walker Books Australia)

      Deadlands: Hunted, Skye Melki-Wegner (Walker Books Australia)

      The hotel witch, Jessica Miller (Text Publishing)

      Spellhound, Lian Tanner (Allen & Unwin)

      BEST YOUNG ADULT SHORT STORY

      “The lingering taste of your last supper”, Matthew R Davis (Shallow Waters Patreon, Crystal Lake Entertainment) 

      “Moonfall”, Alison Evans (Everything under the moon, Affirm Press) 

      “Precarious Waters”, Pamela Jeffs (Precarious waters and other dark tales, Four Ink Press) 

      “Follow The Water”, J Palmer (Where the weird things are Vol 2, Deadset Press)

      “An 80s tenement love story”, Anthony Panegyres (Bourbon Penn #31)

      “Integrated learning”, C H Pearce (Aurealis #166) 

      BEST HORROR SHORT STORY

      “Il re Giallo”, Matthew R Davies (Strange Aeon: 2023)

      “Death interrupted”, Pamela Jeffs (Body of work, Canberra Speculative Fiction Guild)

      “Stokehold”, Pamela Jeffs (SNAFU: Punk’d, Cohesion Press)

      “There are things on me”, Matt Tighe (Killer creatures down under: Horror stories with bite, IFWG Publishing International) 

      “Trial by fire”, Matt Tighe (Etherea Magazine #18, Sunburnt Fox Press)

      “Blood born”, Pauline Yates (Midnight Echo #18, Australasian Horror Writers Association)

      BEST FANTASY SHORT STORY

      “Sea mist, shore witch”, Mikhaeyla Kopievsky (Where the weird things are Vol 2, Deadset Press)

      “What bones these tides bring”, Nikky Lee (Remains to be told: Dark tales of Aotearoa, Clan Destine Press)

      “The reeds remember”, Juliet Marillier (The other side of never, Titan Books)

      “The dark man, by referral”, Chuck McKenzie (This fresh hell, Clan Destine Press)

      “The unexpected excursion of the murder mystery writing witches”, Garth Nix (The book of witches, HarperVoyager)

      “12 days of Witchmas”, Tansy Rayner Roberts (Patreon, self-published)

      BEST SCIENCE FICTION SHORT STORY

      “Beirut robot hyenadome”, Thoraiya Dyer (Shoreline of Infinity #36)

      “Change YourView”, Matt Tighe (Nature: Futures)

      “Trial by fire”, Matt Tighe (Etherea Magazine #18, Sunburnt Fox Press)

      “Hollywood animals”, Corey J White (Interzone #295)

      “Customer service”, Emily Wyeth (Mother’s milk, Sempiternal House)

      BEST GRAPHIC NOVEL / ILLUSTRATED WORK

      MEAT4BURGERS, Christof Bogacs & Beck Kubrick (self-published)

      Frankenstein Monstrance Preview #1, Jason Franks & Tam Morris (IPI Comics)

      Monomyth, David Hazan & Cecilia Lo Valvo (Mad Cave Studios)

      Ember and the Island of Lost Creatures, Jason Pamment (Allen & Unwin)

      BEST COLLECTION

      The measure of sorrow: Stories, J Ashley-Smith (Meerkat Press)

      The gold leaf executions, Helen Marshall (Unsung Stories)

      Firelight, John Morrissey (Text Publishing)

      BEST ANTHOLOGY

      Strangely enough, Gillian Hagenus (Ed.) (MidnightSun Publishing)

      An unexpected party, Seth Malacari (Ed.) (Fremantle Press) 

      The book of witches, Jonathan Strahan (Ed.) (HarperVoyager)

      BEST YOUNG ADULT NOVEL

      Borderland, Graham Akhurst (UWA Publishing) 

      When ghosts call us home, Katya de Becerra (Macmillan)

      Archives of despair, Caleb Finn (Penguin Random House Australia)

      The weaver, Melanie Kanicky (MidnightSun Publishing) 

      The spider and her demons, sydney khoo (Penguin Random House Australia)

      The non-magical Declan Moore, Nathan Taylor (Magpie Drive Press)

      BEST HORROR NOVELLA

      The morass, Zachary Ashford (Crystal Lake Entertainment)

      The leaves forget, Alan Baxter (Absinthe Books)

      “Hole World”, J S Breukelaar (Apex Magazine #141)

      “Quicksilver”, J S Breukelaar (Vandal: Stories of damage, Crystal Lake Entertainment)

      Radcliffe, Madeleine D’Este (Deadset Press)

      Bitters, KaaronWarren (Cemetery Dance)

      BEST HORROR NOVEL

      Borderland, Graham Akhurst (UWA Publishing) 

      When ghosts call us home, Katya de Becerra (Macmillan)

      The graveyard shift, Maria Lewis (Datura Books)

      Some shall break, Ellie Marney (Allen & Unwin)

      Cretaceous canyon, Deborah Sheldon (Severed Press)

      Bunny, S E Tolsen (Pan Macmillan Australia)

      BEST FANTASY NOVELLA

      The leaves forget, Alan Baxter (Absinthe Books)

      “Hole World”, J S Breukelaar (Apex Magazine #141)

      The wizard must be stopped!, Taylen Carver (Stories Rule Press)

      “A marked man”, T R Napper (Grimdark Magazine #36)

      A wicked blade, Tansy Rayner Roberts (self-published)

      Gate sinister, Tansy Rayner Roberts (self-published)

      BEST FANTASY NOVEL  

      Shadow baron, Davinia Evans (Orbit / Hachette)

      The will of the many, James Islington (Text Publishing)

      The sinister booksellers of Bath, Garth Nix (Allen & Unwin)

      Of knives and night-blooms, Tansy Rayner Roberts (self-published)

      The blood-born dragon, J C Rycroft (BattleWarrior Press)  

      How to be remembered, Michael Thompson (Allen & Unwin)

      BEST SCIENCE FICTION NOVELLA

      “Eight or die”, Thoraiya Dyer (Clarkesworld #206/207)

      Killware, Tim Hawken (Seahawk Press)

      Once we flew, Nikky Lee (self-published)

      The last to go, A D Lyall (Shawline Publishing Group)

      “Showdown on planetoid Pencrux”, Garth Nix (Asimov’s Science Fiction, July/August 2023)

      Bitters, Kaaron Warren (Cemetery Dance)

      BEST SCIENCE FICTION NOVEL

      Minds of sand and light, Kylie Chan (HarperCollins Publishers)

      The comforting weight of water, Roanna McClelland (Wakefield Press)

      Aliens: Bishop, T. R. Napper (Titan Books)

      Dronikus, Marko Newman (AndAlso Books)

      Time of the cat, Tansy Rayner Roberts (self-published)

      Traitor’s run, Keith Stevenson (coeur de lion publishing)

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      2023 Aurealis Awards entries close TODAY

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      Aurealis Awards close in ONE WEEK!

      Entries for the 2023 Aurealis Awards close on THURSDAY December 14!

      It’s essential that ALL work published (or planned for publication) between 1 January 2023 and 31 December 2023 is entered by this deadline.

      Check out the list of current entries here, and enter your Australian speculative fiction work in the Aurealis Awards here.

      If you have a publication due out in late December, please enter it NOW. If publication is delayed into 2023 we can remove it from consideration in this year’s Awards, but we are NOT able to enter carry over work published late in the year into the following year.

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      Aurealis Awards entries update and reminder

      There is now less than one month until entries close for the 2023 Aurealis Awards. It’s important to remember that ALL eligible Australian work published for the first time between January 1 and December 31, 2023 must be entered by December 14, even work intended for publication after the December 14 cut off date.

      If you have any work scheduled for publication after December 14, enter it NOW! If publication is delayed, we can easily remove the entry, but we are unable to make exceptions afterwards if work is not entered by the December 14 deadline.

      Please take care to check the updated entries received list and get your entries in!

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      2023 Aurealis Awards open for entry

      We are delighted to announce that the 2023 Aurealis Awards are now open for immediate entry.

      The Aurealis Awards, Australia’s premier awards for speculative fiction, are for works created by an Australian citizen or permanent resident, and published for the first time between 1 January 2023 and 31 December 2023.

      We strongly encourage publishers and authors to enter all works published already this year by September 30, 2023, then subsequent publications as they are released; our judges appreciate having time to consider each entry carefully.

      Entries for the Aurealis Awards main categories close on December 14, 2023.

      Full guidelines and FAQ can be found on the Aurealis Awards website:

      Rules

      FAQ

      The Aurealis Awards judges welcome electronic entries in all categories, including novels, short stories, novellas, illustrated work / graphic novels, collections, anthologies, children’s and young adult fiction. The Aurealis Awards management team recognises the financial burden of entering multiple works in multiple categories to some authors, editors and publishers at independent small presses. We accept epub files, although PDF may be provided if no other format is available (particularly for graphic works). Print may also be supplied.

      Finalists of all Award categories will be announced early in 2024 and winners announced at a ceremony to take place in the first half of the year. For more information on the Awards or for the entry forms, visit the Aurealis Awards website at https://aurealisawards.org/.

      For more information contact the judging coordinator Tehani Croft at aajudges@gmail.com.

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      2022 Aurealis Awards Winners

      Silver medallion with Chimaera logo and text reading Aurealis Awards Winner

      The Aurealis Awards management team, on behalf of the Canberra Speculative Fiction Guild, would like to congratulate the winners of this year’s Awards. We also take this opportunity to once again thank the judging panels for all their hard work making the difficult decisions of shortlists and the winning works, the CSFG committee for organising the ceremony, and all the creators and publishers who continue to make the Aurealis Awards Australia’s premier speculative fiction award each year.

      BEST CHILDREN’S FICTION

      The Wintrish Girl, Melanie La’Brooy (University of Queensland Press)

      BEST YOUNG ADULT SHORT STORY

      “Tastes like Home”, Kiera Lesley (Andromeda Spaceways Magazine #86) 

      BEST HORROR SHORT STORY

      “They Call Me Mother”, Geneve Flynn (Classic Monster Unleashed, Crystal Lake Publishing and Black Spot Books)

      BEST FANTASY SHORT STORY

      “The Icecutter’s Daughter”, Aiki Flinthart (The Art of Being Human, FableCroft Publishing) 

      BEST SCIENCE FICTION SHORT STORY

      “As Though I Were a Little Sun”, Grace Chan (Fireside Magazine #102)

      BEST GRAPHIC NOVEL / ILLUSTRATED WORK

      The Tree of Ecstasy and Unbearable Sadness, Matt Ottley (Dirt Lane Press)

      BEST COLLECTION

      Here be Leviathans, Chris Flynn (University of Queensland Press)

      BEST ANTHOLOGY

      This All Come Back Now, Mykaela Saunders (Ed.) (University of Queensland Press)

      BEST HORROR NOVELLA

      “Kookaburra Cruel”, Aaron Dries (Damnation Games, Clan Destine Press)

      BEST FANTASY NOVELLA

      Winterbloom, Kirstyn McDermott (Brain Jar Press)

      BEST SCIENCE FICTION NOVELLA

      Resembling Lepus, Amanda Kool (Grey Matter Press)

      BEST YOUNG ADULT NOVEL

      Only a Monster, Vanessa Len (Allen & Unwin)

      BEST HORROR NOVEL

      The Stone Road, Trent Jamieson (Erewhon Books)

      BEST FANTASY NOVEL 

      Path of Thorns, Angela Slatter (Titan Books) 

      BEST SCIENCE FICTION NOVEL

      36 Streets, T R Napper (Titan Books)

      CONVENORS’ AWARD FOR EXCELLENCE 

      The Phantom Never Dies [podcast], Maria Lewis (Nova)

      Read what the judges had to say here!

      https://read.bookcreator.com/90DG3VzetCY2m2OMn8TnlQyCjeA3/oITTRrxUQcW3SvEkhuY6ZA

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