sfadb : Arthur C Clarke Award (original) (raw)

The Arthur C. Clarke Award is a juried award, sponsored initially by Arthur C. Clarke (author of 2001: A Space Odyssey, Childhood's End, and other seminal works). It is given to the best SF novel published each year in the UK (not necessarily by a British writer).

Scope
SF novels published in the UK.

What
Originally £1000, donated by Clarke; the amount increased to £2001 in 2001 and increases by £1 each year so the total is always the same as the year. The trophy is an engraved bookend.

Process
The winning book is chosen by a panel of judges currently invited from the British Science Fiction Association, the Science Fiction Foundation and the SCI-FI-LONDON film festival.

— 2024 — In Ascension, Martin MacInnes
— 2023 — Venomous Lumpsucker, Ned Beauman
— 2022 — Deep Wheel Orcadia, Harry Josephine Giles
— 2021 — The Animals in that Country, Laura Jean McKay
— 2020 — The Old Drift, Namwali Serpell
— 2019 — Rosewater, Tade Thompson
— 2018 — Dreams Before the Start of Time, Anne Charnock
— 2017 — The Underground Railroad, Colson Whitehead
— 2016 — Children of Time, Adrian Tchaikovsky
— 2015 — Station Eleven, Emily St. John Mandel
— 2014 — Ancillary Justice, Ann Leckie
— 2013 — Dark Eden, Chris Beckett
— 2012 — The Testament of Jessie Lamb, Jane Rogers
— 2011 — Zoo City, Lauren Beukes
— 2010 — The City & the City, China Mi�ville
— 2009 — Song of Time, Ian R. MacLeod
— 2008 — Black Man, Richard Morgan
— 2007 — Nova Swing, M. John Harrison
— 2006 — Air, Geoff Ryman
Paul Kincaid (honorary award)
— 2005 — Iron Council, China Mi�ville
— 2004 — Quicksilver, Neal Stephenson
— 2003 — The Separation, Christopher Priest
— 2002 — Bold as Love, Gwyneth Jones
— 2001 — Perdido Street Station, China Mi�ville
— 2000 — Distraction, Bruce Sterling
— 1999 — Dreaming in Smoke, Tricia Sullivan
— 1998 — The Sparrow, Mary Doria Russell
— 1997 — The Calcutta Chromosome, Amitav Ghosh
— 1996 — Fairyland, Paul J. McAuley
— 1995 — Fools, Pat Cadigan
— 1994 — Vurt, Jeff Noon
— 1993 — Body of Glass, Marge Piercy
— 1992 — Synners, Pat Cadigan
— 1991 — Take Back Plenty, Colin Greenland
— 1990 — The Child Garden, Geoff Ryman
— 1989 — Unquenchable Fire, Rachel Pollack
— 1988 — The Sea and Summer, George Turner
— 1987 — The Handmaid's Tale, Margaret Atwood