Hugo Awards post-game analysis

by Doctor Science

The 2014 Hugo Awards were announced August 17, and the results weren’t terribly surprising. The “Sad Puppies Slate”, put together by Larry Correia and other self-described conservatives, lost by a landslide.[1]

Now Correia says both that he isn’t surprised by the results, but also that they prove he was right:

My stated goals this entire time was to get some political untouchables onto their sainted slate, so that they would demonstrate that there was serious political bias in the awards. … I predicted that the SJWs[2] would mobilize to stop the untouchable barbarians, so I got some barbarians through the gates, and the SJWs mobilized like I said they would… And I’m supposed to be sad about that for some reason, why?

In other words, he put together a slate to “make the liberals mad”, liberals got mad, the slate lost, this proves that the awards have a liberal bias.

What kind of weird is that John Scalzi, one of the Sad Puppies’ leading opponents, thought something else was going on:

Correia was foolish to put his own personal capital as a successful and best selling novelist into championing Vox Day and his novelette, because Vox Day is a real bigoted shithole of a human being, and his novelette was, to put it charitably, not good (less charitably: It was like Gene Wolfe strained through a thick and rancid cheesecloth of stupid). Doing that changed the argument from something perfectly legitimate, if debatable — that conservative writers are often ignored for or discounted on award ballots because their personal politics generally conflict with those of the award voters — into a different argument entirely, i.e., fuck you, we got an undeserving bigoted shithole on the Hugo ballot, how you like them apples.

As for me, I see something else that neither Correia nor even Scalzi seems to have noticed:

None of the Sad Puppies’ horses is fit to race. The only ones I can call reasonably competent works of fiction are Correia’s novel and Dan Wells’ “The Butcher of Khardov”. They also read way too much like re-tellings of unfamiliar video games, and lack the most important quality Hugo voters are looking for, world-building. They are, at best, B level works, not the kind of thing I think *anyone* would want associated with “Hugo Award Winning”.

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