The Tiptree Award for 2012 goes to two books. The Drowning Girl by Caitlin R. Kiernan and Ancient, Ancient by Kiini Ibura Salaam.
Caitlin R. Kiernan’s The Drowning Girl probably couldn’t have been written without its multifaceted consideration of gender roles and its extraordinary management of an unreliable narrator who doesn’t even trust herself. For India Morgan Phelps (aka Imp), the act of telling the story parallels the act of choosing a path or an identity as she makes her way through a maze of false memories and blurred realities. Using myth, art, and mental illness, this beautifully written novel explores the boundaries between reality and fantasy, sanity and insanity, and art and dream. It’s complex in its plot, metaphor, and style as well as in its thinking about one’s role as a woman and a daughter. In its characters, lesbian, straight, and transgender, old and young, this novel also recognizes the complexity of human beings.
In Ancient, Ancient, Kiini Ibura Salaam’s
startling stories combine science fiction, fantasy, and mythology in a
sensuous exploration of what it means to live while struggling to define
self and other. Salaam’s language is poetic and sensuous — a unique and
original voice. The stories are ambitious and challenging,
demonstrating excellent range in both storytelling style and imagery,
from the mundane to the fully fantastical. Salaam is particularly
interested in agency in oppressive social realities and explores how
oppression works on our gendered bodies.
In
addition to selecting the winner, the jury chooses a Tiptree Award
Honor List. The Honor List is a strong part of the award’s identity and
is used by many readers as a recommended reading list for the rest of
the year. This year’s Honor List is:
§ Elizabeth Bear, Range of Ghosts (Tor
2012) — A rip-roaring tale with imaginative worldbuilding, convincing
exploration of gender, power, and possibility, and an intriguing
juxtaposition of procreative energy, wizardly magic, and necromancy. The
first book in the Eternal Sky trilogy.
§ Roz Kaveney, Rituals (Plus
One Press 2012) — Tremendous fun while dealing with serious issues
around power, gender, class, economics. Genre-savvy while subverting
conventions and tropes. This is the first book in Rhapsody of Blood, a
four-part series.
§ M.J. Locke, Up Against It (Tor
2011) — On an asteroid world, characters struggle with the social
implications of altered biology. The control and betrayal of innocent
AI’s are particularly fascinating.
§ Kim Stanley Robinson, 2312 (Orbit
2012) — A rare and honest effort to examine gender multiplicity in pure
hard-SF terms. This vision of freedom from gender assignment could
help revise the standard hard-SF future in much the same way that
Robinson’s Mars trilogy revised the portrayal of Mars in science
fiction.
§ Karin Tidbeck, Jagannath (Cheeky
Frawg Books, 2012) — A beautifully written collection of short stories
using Norse myth; the ones that involve gender identities present
figures not easily forgotten, from the Aunts to the Great Mother to the
characters mooning over an airship and a steam engine.
§ Ankaret Wells, Firebrand
(Epicon Press 2012) — Set in the steampunk era, this fun read shows
women dealing with the restrictions of society on their way to gaining
political and economic power and considers how definitions of “proper”
behavior worked across cultural, class, and species’ boundaries.
§ Lesley Wheeler, “The Receptionist” (in The Receptionist and Other Tales,
Aqueduct Press 2012) — An overt exploration of gender and power in
narrative poetry with splendidly drawn characters and pitch-perfect
language.
The Tiptree Award winners will be honored during Memorial Day weekend at WisCon
in Madison, Wisconsin. Each winner will receive $1000 in prize money, a
specially commissioned piece of original artwork, and (as always)
chocolate.
I lifted the above whole from the Tiptree website. Congratulations, of course, to both winners and everyone on the Honor List (and also, of course, to the jury). And happy reading to all of us!
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