eruthros: Delenn building the crystal machine in season 1  of B5, captioned "foreshadowing" (B5 - Delenn incredible foreshadowing)
[personal profile] eruthros
So I was being grumpy about that NPR list of the top 100 science fiction and fantasy novels and how boring it was, and then I started wondering what that kind of list would look like if a bunch of fannish people made it instead and if the definition of scifi and fantasy were looser.

And then I decided to do it, more or less on the same model as the NPR list, because why not? At the very least it would mean getting a bunch of interesting recs.

So the general model is:
1) Nomination period: anyone can nominate ten speculative fiction works (in any media).
2) Long list: made up of all the nominations where anyone can vote for their favorites. (Probably divided by media and/or language because the poll might be too big otherwise.) NPR used some NPR folks or an algorithm or something and then a panel of "experts" at this point to narrow things down, but nobody's an expert on all speculative fiction. (And also either the unknown NPR folks or the experts did this.)
3) Short list: a poll of the top two hundred-some things from the long list.
4) Compile the numbers from (3) to make the final list of the top 100.

And this is going to be the nomination post! For nominating things you love. They don't have to be the things that you think of as the absolute objectively best speculative fiction - nominate your favorites or the things you love most or the things you think are best or the things that influenced you the most or however else you define your top ten speculative fiction works.

What counts as speculative fiction?
Anything called "scifi" or "fantasy" or "horror" or "paranormal" or "supernatural" or "magical realism." Anything with vampires or werewolves or zombies or bodyswap or time travel or space travel or aliens or other planets or apocalypses or talking animals or magic swords or angels or demons or fairies or faeries or mystical creatures or other dimensions or futuristic tech or superpowers or wizards or witches or ghosts or blasters or talking trees or sapient rocks or teleportation or elves or A.I. or giant robots or alternate history or about a million other speculative fiction tropes. If you think it's speculative fiction, it's speculative fiction, regardless of what the original creators call it or where it's usually shelved. Young adult and children's speculative fiction counts, too.

The nomination rules:
You can nominate up to ten speculative fiction things from any media. So you could nominate a live action tv show, cartoon, anime, book, book series, short story, album, song, comic series, graphic novel, manga/manhwa/manhua, movie, fanfic, fanart, fanvid, amv, music video, video game, rpg, webcomic, picture, episode of a tv show, etc.

The things you nominate don't have to be English-language sources - any language is okay.

The things you nominate can be things that were on the NPR list - there were many great books on that list!

You can comment using a dreamwidth account, using openID, or anonymously, but if you comment anonymously please include a name/username/pseudonym somewhere in your comment.

Everything anyone nominates will end up on the long list, regardless of how many times it's nominated, so you don't have to worry about making sure enough people nominate it. (But since people can change their nominations later, if you really really want to see it on the poll, you might want to nominate it yourself.)

To nominate your ten things:
Comment here telling me what you'd like to nominate, and what medium it is so I don't have to google it. If you'd like, you can comment on your nominations and recommend them to passerby, or link to them if they're available anywhere online. (And you can comment to other people's nominations if you want to find out more/rejoice at finding someone else who also loves X.)

If you change your mind, reply to your own comment with your updated list.

Nominations will be open for a week, conveniently closing after both my current freelance project and my femslash 11 story are due.

Example nomination:
Book Series:
1. Terry Pratchett - Discworld series

Music:
2. Janelle Monae - Metropolis/The ArchAndroid

TV show:
3. Avatar: The Last Airbender
4. Babylon 5
5. Code Geass

Book:
6. Rosemary Kirstein - The Outskirter's Secret

Fanfic:
7. Your Cowboy Days Are Over by M.

Feel free to signal-boost! More nominations = more interesting polls.

ETA: Here's a browsable spreadsheet listing all of the nominations as of 8/19. Many, many things have been nominated!

ETA2: Oh what the hell, some people have asked for it and why not! You can have +5 additional nominations as long as they're for less-represented speculative fiction media: music (songs, albums, filk, music videos), fanworks (fanfic, fanvids, fanfilms, fanart), theater (plays, musicals), poetry, games (video, rpg, card, board), short films, art (paintings, fanart, digital art), or any medium that's not currently represented on the spreadsheet at all.

ETA3: Nominations are now closed.

Date: 2011-08-14 07:11 am (UTC)
lastwingedthing: (destiny)
From: [personal profile] lastwingedthing
This is a brilliant idea! Aaaah but choosing only ten things is so hard. Even if I leave off anything that's already been nominated more than once - Fire & Hemlock! The Xenogenesis Trilogy! His Dark Materials - it's still so hard. :(

Print (single works):
1) Ursula K Le Guin - Always Coming Home
2) Peter Beagle - The Last Unicorn
3) China Mieville - Iron Council
Out of the Bas-Lag trilogy The Scar is, perhaps, the better novel, but I'm nominating this one anyway. Because it's bleak and brutal and beautiful, because it is explicitly and unashamedly a novel with a radical political agenda, because it is about resistance and class struggle and the power structures of imperialism and capitalism and the military-industrial complex. Because the action is driven by a revolutionary who is out to find the man he loves as much as he is out to save his city, because the man he loves is named Judah Low, because another protagonist is an illiterate prostitute who starts a fucking revolution. Because there are no heroes and no saviours, but you keep fighting anyway.
4) Margaret Cavendish, Duchess of Newcastle - The Blazing World
"I am not Covetous, but as Ambitious as ever any of my Sex was, is, or can be; which is the cause, That though I cannot be Henry the Fifth, or Charles the Second; yet, I will endeavour to be, Margaret the First: and, though I have neither Power, Time nor Occasion, to be a great Conqueror, like Alexander, or Cesar; yet, rather than not be Mistress of a World, since Fortune and the Fates would give me none, I have made One of my own."
Along with the fantasy setting, The Blazing World has a kind of a Mary Sue, and it's definitely self-insertion, and it's got cutting-edge science and a pretty queer female friendship - and it was written in 1666. It's brilliant! (Cavendish was a conservative monarchist even for the period, and some parts jar a lot, but it's still brilliant!)
5) Tom Stoppard - Arcadia
I'm not totally sure about including this? But it's so gloriously, unashamedly driven by a love for science, for ideas, for time and maths and the heat death of the universe - I can't not.

Print (series):
6) Ursula K Le Guin - The Hainish Cycle (which kind of feels like cheating, almost. But how else can you get The Dispossessed AND The Day Before The Revolution AND Four Ways to Forgiveness AND Winter's King AND A Fisherman of the Inland Sea AND Dancing to Ganam, and all the rest?)
7) Tanith Lee - Tales from the Flat Earth (Night's Master, Death's Master, Delusion's Master, Delirium's Mistress, Night's Sorceries)
She's written so much, but this is archtypical Tanith Lee for me - fantastical, dark, sexual, grotesque, full of women and queerness and stories that never go quite like you expect.
8) Sheri Tepper - The Arbai Trilogy (Grass, Raising the Stones, Sideshow)

Film:
9) Mononoke Hime/Princess Mononoke

Fic:
10) Rydra Wong's Walked Right Out Of The Machinery
Aliens taking over a host body is such an old sci-fi trope, but I've never seen anything do it quite like this.

5 extra nominations + 1 edit

Date: 2011-08-21 03:18 am (UTC)
lastwingedthing: (dirty little secrets)
From: [personal profile] lastwingedthing
I forgot Jackie French! Can I replace #8, The Arbai Trilogy, with Jackie French's The Children of the Valley series? Yes, it's out-of-print Australian YA fiction from the early nineties that probably no-one else has ever read, but oh well.

Five additional nominations:

Poetry:
11) Lord Byron - Darkness. The end of the world.

Vid:
12) Kiki Miserychic - We Are All Connected. The beauty and wonder and terror of the universe. It's so big, and people are so small; but their lives and deaths and the things they make matter anyway.

13) Sweetestdrain - Land. Possibility/inevitability.

Fan film:
14) CVM Productions - Battlestar Redactica.

And I think I'll save the last slot, just in case.

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eruthros: Delenn from Babylon 5 with a startled expression and the text "omg!" (Default)
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