Showing posts with label Ellen Datlow. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ellen Datlow. Show all posts

'Poe' wins the Shirley Jackson Awards


The Shirley Jackson Award for an Edited Anthology goes to....

Poe: 19 New Tales Inspired by Edgar Allan Poe, edited by Ellen Datlow (Solaris Books)


The winners were announced at Readercon 21, the Conference on Imaginative Literature, in Burlington, Massachusetts. Read about the winners in the other categories, here.

The Shirley Jackson Awards were established in 2007 for 'outstanding achievement in the literature of psychological suspense, horror, and the dark fantastic'. They were created in honour of Shirley Jackson's contribution to the genre, most notably her novels The Haunting of Hill House and We Have Always Lived in the Castle.

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Poe Gets Another Nomination

Honestly, I think Ellen's going to get sick of attending posh parties...

The Poe anthology's up for another award. This time it's the Shirley Jackson Award for horror, given in honour of the author of The Haunting of Hill House and We Have Always Lived in the Castle. And, of course, we're in it twice.

Poe's up for the best Edited Anthology category, and the short story "Strappado," by the awesomely-named Laird Barron, is up for the best Short Story category.

The Awards will be given out at Readercon 21 in Burlington, Massachussets this July.

Congratulations, Ellen and Laird! Great work.

David

Hugo Nominations: Onward to Victory! (We hope)

Hey all,

If you post it, they will vote. The Hugo Award, in the apallingly unlikely event that you haven't heard of it, is the daddy of science fiction and fantasy awards. It's a big, big, BIG deal. And one of our contributors, noted novelist and Doctor Who author Paul Cornell (pictured right), has been nominated in the short story category for his piece, "One of Our Bastards is Missing" (click link for a free download of the story), which first appeared in the Solaris Book of New Science Fiction, Volume Three.




Furthermore, Ellen Datlow (pictured), editor of the Poe horror anthology, has been nominated for the best short-form editor (essentially, the category for anthologists). You may also remember that Poe won the Black Quill and was nominated for the Bram Stoker. Now, Ellen's put a few strings to her bow in the last year, but we like to think Poe's one of the reasons she's up for this.







This is brilliant news for both Paul and Ellen. We're really pleased for them.

Cheers,

David

Post the Fourth: Solaris authors at the World Horror Con!

Brian Lumley signing for all his many, many fans at the con!

Vincent Chong, cover artist for Shine, poses with his shiny, shiny creation. Shine is being launched at Eastercon next weekend!

Ian Whates, author of The Noise Within (coming out from Solaris in May) with his writing-group pal Ian Watson, author of the Spielberg movie AI: Artificial Intelligence

Some scary looking chap and, no, wait, the scary-looking one is Andy Remic

Conrad William in 'The Reading Cafe,' reading from the novel he'll be writing for Solaris next year...

Jon Oliver and Ellen Datlow, editor of the Poe anthology, out for lunch

Ellen on the Women in Horror panel moderated by Maura McHugh

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See previous posts and photos from the World Horror Con over here. Now comes with added Neil Gaiman!


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Poe Goodness

Hey kids,

Poe, Ellen Datlow's anthology of short horror stories inspired by the classic American author Edgar Allan Poe, has been critically acclaimed over and over and listed in "Best Of" lists all over webland, and now it's starting to show up in the awards lists. Two recent accomplishments are:

Dark Scribe Magazine's third annual Black Quill Awards were announced last month, and Poe won the "Readers' Choice" in the Best Dark Genre Anthology category. This is a fairly new award, but already becoming an influential achievement, so congratulations to Ellen and her authors for that one.

Most excitingly, the Horror Writers' Association has announced the nominees for the coveted Bram Stoker Award, and Poe's been nominated in the "Superior Achievement in an Anthology" category (I also note that Ellen's in there twice, with a Lovecraft anthology for Dark Horse Books, so well done, Ellen). This is pretty much the big one, and even just being nominated is a serious achievement. Fingers crossed for the announcement.

Awesome results all round.

David

Friday links

  • Joel Glover has reviewed Juliet McKenna's Irons in the Fire for the David Gemmell Awards website. Review can be read here. Don't forget to get involved and vote for all your favourite Solaris Books!
  • There's a year-end review of Ellen Datlow's anthology New Tales Inspired by Edger Allen Poe at the Dark Recesses Magazine website, which charts all the celebrations in 2009 which marked the 200th anniversary of the gothic author's birth. Linkage here.
  • Last but not least, The Innsmouth Free Press (what a great name for a great site!) has reviewed Brian Lumley's book of Cthulhu Mythos tales, Haggopian and Other Stories, here.

Have a great weekend, everyone! Be seeing you next week.

-Jen

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