Nebula Award Winners

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The Nebula Award is a writing award given in several categories by the Science Fiction and Fantasy Writers of America (SFFWA.) First awarded in 1965, the Nebulas are voted upon by members of the SFFWA. Membership in the SFFWA requires publication of at least three short stories or one full-length book in a professional market.

  1. 1965
    Dune (Dune Chronicles, Book 1)
    by Frank Herbert

  2. 1966
    Flowers for Algernon (Bantam Classic)
    by Daniel Keyes

  3. 1966
    Babel-17
    by Samuel R. Delaney

  4. 1967
    The Einstein Intersection
    by Samuel R. Delany

  5. 1968
    ?
    Rite of Passage
    by Alexei Panshin

  6. 1969
    The Left Hand of Darkness (Remembering Tomorrow)
    by Ursula K. Le Guin

  7. 1970
    Ringworld
    by Larry Niven

  8. 1971
    A Time of Changes
    by Robert Silverberg

  9. 1972
    The Gods Themselves
    by Isaac Asimov

  10. 1973
    Rendezvous with Rama
    by Arthur C. Clarke

  11. 1974
    The Dispossessed: An Ambiguous Utopia
    by Ursula K. Le Guin

  12. 1975
    The Forever War
    by Joe Haldeman

  13. 1976
    Man Plus (SF Masterworks) (Sf Masterworks 29)
    by Frederik Pohl

  14. 1977
    Gateway (Heechee Saga)
    by Frederik Pohl

  15. 1978
    ?
    DREAMSNAKE
    by Vonda Mcintyre

  16. 1979
    The Fountains of Paradise
    by Arthur C. Clarke

  17. 1980
    Timescape
    by Gregory Benford

  18. 1981
    ?

  19. 1982
    No Enemy But Time
    by Michael Bishop

  20. 1983
    Startide Rising (The Uplift Saga, Book 2)
    by David Brin

  21. 1984
    Neuromancer
    by William Gibson

  22. 1985
    Ender's Game (Ender, Book 1)
    by Orson Scott Card

  23. 1986
    Speaker for the Dead (Ender, Book 2)
    by Orson Scott Card

  24. 1987
    The Falling Woman
    by Pat Murphy

  25. 1988
    Falling Free
    by Lois McMaster Bujold

  26. 1989
    ?
    Healer's War
    by Elizabeth Ann Scarborough

  27. 1990
    Tehanu (The Earthsea Cycle, Book 4)
    by Ursula K. Le Guin

  28. 1991
    Stations of the Tide
    by Michael Swanwick

  29. 1992
    Doomsday Book
    by Connie Willis

  30. 1993
    Red Mars (Mars Trilogy)
    by Kim Stanley Robinson

  31. 1994
    Moving Mars: A Novel
    by Greg Bear

  32. 1995
    ?
    The Terminal Experiment
    by Robert J. Sawyer

  33. 1996
    Slow River
    by Nicola Griffith

  34. 1997
    The Moon and the Sun
    by Vonda N. McIntyre

  35. 1998
    Forever Peace
    by Joe Haldeman

  36. 1999
    Parable of the Talents
    by Octavia E. Butler

  37. 2000
    Darwin's Radio
    by Greg Bear

  38. 2001
    The Quantum Rose (The Saga of the Skolian Empire)
    by Catherine Asaro

  39. 2002
    American Gods
    by Neil Gaiman

  40. 2003
    The Speed of Dark (Ballantine Reader's Circle)
    by Elizabeth Moon

  41. 2004
    Paladin of Souls
    by Lois McMaster Bujold

  42. 2005
    Camouflage
    by Joe Haldeman

  43. 2006
    Seeker
    by Jack McDevitt

  44. 2007
    The Yiddish Policemen's Union: A Novel (P.S.)
    by Michael Chabon

  45. 2008
    Powers (Annals of the Western Shore)
    by Ursula K. Le Guin

  46. 2009
    The Windup Girl
    by Paolo Bacigalupi

  47. 2010
    Blackout
    by Connie Willis

  48. 2010
    All Clear
    by Connie Willis

  49. 2011
    Among Others
    by Jo Walton

  50. 2012
    2312
    by Kim Stanley Robinson

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Created by Robot Co-op on Nov 30, 2005.
 

Comments

2009 — 2 years ago

I added the 2009 winner but I don’t know the magic to make it listed as year 2009. :-(


bright side — 4 years ago

it just means that we have our work cut out for us—happy task, really. (I’ve consumed but 4%)


Untitled — 6 years ago

I always thought there were more of these — and no Miles Vorskosgian with any of the Bujold … Real shame there.


wow.... — 6 years ago

okay so I’m not so much of a geek as I thought, but still fairly geeky for a girl in most people’s eyes LOL


" Breinstein Cyborg" — 6 years ago

" What more can be said of any award winning books fiction/non-fiction of human affairs, than that it brings cyborgers nearer to the best nominators they can be.


Untitled — 6 years ago

Holy shit, get reading woman! I thought I was a bigger sci-fi fan..




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