The National Excellence in Romance Fiction Awards (NERFA) web site (RomanceAwards.com) recently highlighted the SFR Galaxy Awards with a slideshow depicting many of the award winning covers.
The NERFA site also features the Romance Awards Directory, Romance Fiction Statistics, Romance Novel News, and the Beacon Awards.
We encourage you to support NERFA by stopping by to view their site and see all the award winning romances. Bet you'll find some great new reads.
Tuesday, February 5, 2013
Friday, February 1, 2013
Until Next Time...
The SFR Galaxy Awards team would like to thank everyone who visited this blog for the award ceremony. We had a smashing great time sharing our picks and hope you discovered new science fiction romance books, films, or graphic novels to enjoy in the process.
For your convenience, the 2013 awards are listed in the Award Archive.
Thanks ever so much to those of you who blogged, tweeted, or otherwise helped spread the news of this event.
The 2013 SFR Galaxy Awards may have ended, but further science fiction romance fun awaits.
Join us on January 31, 2014 for an all new adventure!
For your convenience, the 2013 awards are listed in the Award Archive.
Thanks ever so much to those of you who blogged, tweeted, or otherwise helped spread the news of this event.
The 2013 SFR Galaxy Awards may have ended, but further science fiction romance fun awaits.
Join us on January 31, 2014 for an all new adventure!
Thursday, January 31, 2013
SFR Galaxy Awards 2013: Round Eight by Anna McLain
Best May-December Romance – Keir, Pippa Jay.
Tarquin Secker has
spent centuries pursuing the alien monster that destroyed her homeworld. Her
chase brings many unexpected joys and conflicts, but perhaps most unexpected of
all is true love. Despite their many differences Quin and Keir find a common
ground between them and build upon it. This story kicks butt with sea monsters,
dragons, psy, time travel and more. The romance builds slowly and realistically
between them. Keir was published
by Lyrical Press, Inc., released on August 1st 2012. 266 pgs.
SFR Galaxy Awards 2013: Round Seven by Heather Massey
Best Heavyset Hero - A Gift For Boggle by PJ Schnyder (Free
short story at the author’s site)
A Gift For Boggle
pushes sci-fi romance boundaries—and romance boundaries in general—in the best
way possible. A spin-off of the author’s Hunting
Kat (and I strongly recommend you read that one first), the story gives
Boggle a romance of his own. Not only is Boggle overweight, but he’s also
physically disabled, a nerd, and a loner. Despite those seemingly non-hero
attributes, PJ Schnyder made him superlative hero material. A Gift For Boggle is a truly innovative
science fiction romance.
SFR Galaxy Awards 2013: Round Six by Rae Lori
Best SFR Adaptation
from An Unrelated Genre Classic – Romeo
and Juliet: The War by Max Work, Skan Srisuwan, Stan Lee, Terry Dougas
We all know the story of the Montagues and the Capulets, but
did you read the version where the Montagues are war mongering cyborgs and the
Capulets are enhanced humans with molecular regenerative abilities? Both are
created by patriarchal scientists with a goal to enhance humans for war. After
the enemies of the countries have been dispatched, the only thing left for
these warriors is to fight each other. This is a graphic novel that almost went
under my radar but the blurb was too juicy to pass up. Verona
is now and empire complete with lasers, a dystopian future and fast paced
classic tale of star crossed love. This is a fast paced story that reads like a
movie and will keep readers on the edge of their seat to the end.
SFR Galaxy Awards 2013: Round Four by Marlene Harris
Best
Excuse for a Re-read – Break Out (revised and expanded edition) by Nina
Croft
When
Break Out came out in 2011, the premise was one of those things that
could have gotten seriously, seriously out of hand. Just think about this for a
second: "Vampires in space." If you don't hear the Muppets saying
"Pigs in SPAAACE!" somewhere in the back of your mind, you've missed
some great Star Trek parody. But Break Out and its
sequel, Deadly Pursuit, aren't intended as camp. Rico Sanchez '
character is a vampire for a reason, and it worked for the story. But the
original version of Break Out was too damn short at 140 pages and there wasn't enough
worldbuilding. I still loved it. In 2012, Croft released the expanded edition.
At 400 pages, there's enough time and space for the backstory and the
worldbuilding I craved, and still a kick-ass story. My award for the Best
Excuse for a Re-read goes to author Nina Croft for seamlessly adding marvelous
new background and sideplots into what was already a great story in the
expanded edition of Break Out from Entangled Publishing.
Published August 14, 2012.
SFR Galaxy Awards 2013: Round Three by Laurie A. Green
Most Fascinating Hero Award – Mako's
Bounty by Diane Dooley
It
isn't often that a SFR can surprise me in such a good way, but this one boldly
ventured into rarely explored territory with a bad boy hero who comes complete
with unique twist--he's a man of faith. When confronted with a feisty heroine
who's hot on his trail and after his head, Vin
'The Saint' Sainte resorts not to emotional manipulation
but...prayer? And it works beautifully! I found this a fascinating character
facet seldom seen in SFR (or most Romance genres, for that matter) and it made
for a refreshing, endearing--and sometimes humorous--leading man. Mako's
Bounty was published by Decadent Publishing, 1NS Series, March
11, 2012. 38 pages.
SFR Galaxy Awards 2013: Round Two by Donna S. Frelick
Best SFR Film of the
Year – Looper, written and directed
by Rian Johnson, starring Joseph Gordon-Levitt, Bruce Willis and Emily Blount
This surprisingly thoughtful shoot-’em-up about gangsters in
the near-future takes us through alternate timelines to an ending worthy of a
Phillip K. Dick short story. Although
**SPOILER ALERT** the lovers in the tale don’t get their HEA, the romance is
the driving motivation of the characters’ actions throughout, qualifying the
film as an SF-with-strong-romantic-elements, at least. The acting is first-rate, and the ending
certainly stands out as one of cinema’s more creative resolutions to the time
travel paradox.
SFR Galaxy Awards 2013: Round One by Charlee Allden
Most Romantic Moment - Ghost Planet, Sharon Lynn Fisher
In Ghost Planet, Sharon Lynn
Fisher creates a world where every human colonist who arrives on the ‘ghost
planet’ is tethered to an alien who manifests in the form of a dead loved one.
I’d never read anything quite like it and I was completely enthralled when I
realized the story was told from the point of view a woman who is one of the
ghosts. She has no knowledge of what is behind the ghostly phenomena and is in
effect, the woman she appears to be with all the memories, emotions, and
intellect of the original – and she is falling in love with the man who created
the ‘ghost protocol’ that instructs colonists to ignore their ghosts. This is
one of those books that raises big moral and ethical questions, but the romance
never suffers. From the moment the hero drops his coat on the ground, so he can
give it to the shivering heroine without overtly breaking his own rules I was
hopelessly in love with the book. Ghost Planet was published by
Tor, October 2012.
Wednesday, January 30, 2013
Welcome to the 2013 SFR Galaxy Awards!
After nearly a year of planning, the first annual SFR Galaxy
Awards is ready to launch. On January 31, you’ll
discover which science
fiction romances from 2012 made a lasting impression on the judges. (For
complete information about the Awards, click here.)
Among the winners, you’ll encounter a wide selection of
sci-fi romance stories from various mediums. Each of the judge’s award
descriptions has a personalized touch, going beyond the title in order to
provide useful information about the stories.
The awards will be posted throughout the day in alphabetical order by judge.
Stay tuned!
Tuesday, January 29, 2013
How the SFR Galaxy Awards Was Born
[I, Heather Massey,
am cross-posting most of this piece from my blog, The
Galaxy Express]
A little over a year ago, author Ursula K. LeGuin wrote
Literary
Bests, a post on the topic of literary awards. One passage in particular
caught my eye:
I wish that, instead of picking one and dumping all the
rest, we celebrated our writers continually and in droves.
I wish we gave literary prizes freely, the way they used to give prizes at the Pet Show at Codornices Park in Berkeley when I was a kid. Every kid in the neighborhood brought their pet, and every pet got a prize, an ad hoc, unique prize: for Soulfulness — for Loud Meowing — for Unusual Spot Placement — for Being the Only Skink…. There was no Best of Breed (in those days there were many mongrels and few breeds), and certainly no Best of Show.
I‘d have some trust and interest in literary prizes like that. For Soulfulness — for Sitting Up and Begging Nicely — for Passion Well Expressed – for Excellent Use of Semi-Colons — for Being the Only Novel About Elderly Female Entomologists in Love…."
After absorbing her insights, a big light bulb went off in
my head. I began to reflect upon a) the role of science fiction romance sites
as gateways to books and b) the current lack of a general SFR award (meaning,
one that isn’t dependent on RWA membership or similar restriction).
As the two paths of reflection merged, I
wrote Laurie A. Green, founder of Spacefreighters Lounge and the SFR Brigade to
discuss the issue. We decided that the idea of giving “literary prizes” away
“freely” would serve SFR very well as an award event.
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