seanan_mcguire: (me)
seanan_mcguire ([personal profile] seanan_mcguire) wrote2012-01-30 12:37 pm
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A brief note on the Hugos before I return to staring at the walls.

Hey, guys. Just a quick reminder that tomorrow, January 31st, 2012, is your last chance to obtain a Chicon 7 supporting membership with full Hugo nomination and voting rights. You will be able to obtain a voting membership after this, but you won't have the opportunity to nominate. You can find details here, on the Chicon 7 website. Supporting memberships are $50 USD.

Why is this a good deal?

$50 is a lot of money, right? So why is this a good deal? Two reasons, really.

Everybody likes books.

The Hugo Awards now come with an electronic voting packet that contains all the nominated fiction, and a lot of the nominated non-fiction. So that's between four and six novels good enough to make the ballot, four and six novellas, novelettes, short stories...it's like a giant Kinderegg of fictional goodness. No matter how you cut it, $50 for that much reading material is a pretty damn good deal, and that's just the fiction. It's a great way to see what the community considered worthy of recognition in any given year, like a really super-sized version of the Hugo nominee anthologies I used to read when I was a kid.

Be part of the process.

The Hugos are nominated, and voted, by a relatively small percentage of the overall community, and every year, people complain about how the winners aren't their choices. Okay. So change it. By putting in a nominating ballot, you shape the final ballot. By voting, you shape the winners. If we want this award to represent our whole community, we need to participate.

It has never been easier to read all the nominated material. It has never been easier to be a part of the process. If you want the Hugos to reflect the material you believe should be winning, you need to participate.

$50 ain't cheap. But what you get for it isn't cheap, either. You get books; you get a voice; and you get to shape what our community recognizes.

It's pretty damn cool.

[identity profile] seanan-mcguire.livejournal.com 2012-01-31 05:58 pm (UTC)(link)
I don't know what to tell you. It didn't become easier on last year's website until after nominations had closed. I do know that the last several years of packets have been DRM-free, because no one wants to piss off the entire voting pool by being the one publisher who insists on locking the files.

[identity profile] peachtales.livejournal.com 2012-02-01 01:36 am (UTC)(link)
It's entirely possible that I wasn't aware of the option until after the nominations had closed. I could have sworn the first time I saw it was before it listed the materials, though (and that might have been between the close of nominations and when the nominees were announced). Who knows.
Also, as you said, not pissing off the voting pool is a good thing.

A slightly ranty sidebar: Of course, I also just bought a nook book that was supposedly a drm free epub (so it could have been read on my sony, no problem), but which can't even be read on the nook app on a pc without wanting the credit card it was bought with on file, so I'm a bit touchy on the subject of drm. I paid them, I am jumping through their hoops, and they want to make sure that i not only paid for it, but that I can pay for it again?

Another sidebar, minus the annoyed: Lilly is so beautiful. <3
Edited 2012-02-01 01:42 (UTC)

[identity profile] seanan-mcguire.livejournal.com 2012-02-01 05:11 pm (UTC)(link)
Lilly has ORANGE EYES whenever something shines on them. That makes her DOUBLE BEAUTIFUL.