Does Being GoH Tilt the Playing Field?

Janice Gelb says she wishes Worldcon GoHs would recuse themselves from the Hugo Awards too:

Personally, I wish more authors had this sense of nicety — I think that authors who are GoHs of a worldcon should not accept nominations. While they obviously cannot directly affect the workings of the Hugo subcommittee, the fact that their names are on every piece of publicity coming from the worldcon to me gives them an unfair advantage, albeit possibly subliminal, in the minds of voters.

I’ve heard people speculate before about the edge a Worldcon guest of honor possibly has in the Hugo Awards. This is the first time I’ve read anyone advocate that GoHs keep themselves off the ballot.

Is there a way of testing this perception? I suppose the best place to start is by reviewing Hugo history. (Note – the following statistics include “Special Guests” as GoHs. Whatever your view is about counting these as Worldcon GoHs, their names are in all the advertising which is Janice’s concern.)

The Hugos have been given at 58 Worldcons and at 14 one or more of the GoHs won a Hugo (24%). So it happens almost a quarter of the time. There have been 16 Hugo-winning guests altogether. That’s not insignificant.

A nominating phase was added to the Hugos in 1959. Since then the Hugos have been given 53 times and at 24 of those Worldcons one (or more) of the guests made the final ballot (45%).

A quarter of the time a GoH wins a Hugo. Half the time a GoH gets nominated for a Hugo.

And the closer you get to the present the more common it is, because now we have a lot more categories, and there’s also a trend to have multiple GoHs. Since 1959 a total of 30 Worldcon guests or their works have been nominees. Of that subset, 10 won (33%).

The numbers could be argued to show that being a GoH biases the outcome. Indeed, counting things to test for bias is one of the great pastimes of the Internet.

But when you consider who gets to be a Worldcon GoH doesn’t this become a which-came-first question? Think about the track record a person in our field needs to have before anyone will consider inviting him/her as a GoH. Why would you assume that kind of person is getting a Hugo because he/she is a GoH that year if they’ve been in contention, and even winning, all along?

Nevertheless, if you perceive a problem and want GoHs to recuse themselves, there are other perceptions to take into account. What about the mixed message “Our Worldcon wants to honor you, but we won’t let you have all the honors fans might want to give you!” Then, if you expect the GoH to make the call, like removing the ruby slippers, these things have to be done delicately. Look at how carefully Patrick Nielsen Hayden fielded the question of a possible withdrawal here a few weeks ago. He is aware a generous gesture is susceptible to being misrepresented as an arrogant assumption about one’s prospects. Is it fair to put every Worldcon GoH in the position of having to walk such a public relations tightrope?

Just speaking for myself, if you wonder why I withdrew when I was a Worldcon chair but not when I was GoH, that was about my inner perception, not the public’s perception. As chair, I felt my level of responsibility meant I shouldn’t be up for an award. As GoH, I felt no conflict. Just one fan’s opinion.

A list of all Hugo-winning and losing Worldcon GoHs follows the jump.

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The Amazing Board

Steve Davidson, The Crotchety Old Fan, has rounded up a brain trust to advise him as he goes about relaunching Amazing Stories.

Serving as his board of advisors in a voluntary capacity are four former editors of Amazing Stories, Barry Malzberg, Patrick L. Price, Ted White and Joseph Wrzos (who edited under the pen name Joseph Ross). Each has extensive experience in the sf genre as an author, agent, editor, collector and/or historian. 

Also, Frank Wu has been enlisted to create the cover for the Davidson’s first issue of Amazing Stories. 

The full press release follows the jump.

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How the Hugos Avoid Conflicts of Interest

The British Fantasy Awards became mired in controversy when Stephen Jones charged a conflict of interest between the administrator and several winners. That prompted a few fans to suggest fixing the BFA by borrowing rules from the Hugo Awards.

The Hugo Awards do have an excellent reputation for avoiding such conflicts, but don’t make the mistake of thinking it’s because of the superior draftsmanship of the rules. The real reason is that over the years many different people have steered clear of conflicts that the rules do not prevent.

What Is a Conflict of Interest? A conflict of interest exists when anyone exploits his/her official capacity for personal benefit.

The Hugo Awards are run under a set of rules that is extremely wary of conflicts of interest. The WSFS Constitution excludes the entire Worldcon committee from winning a Hugo unless these conditions are met:

Section 3.12: Exclusions. No member of the current Worldcon Committee or any publications closely connected with a member of the Committee shall be eligible for an Award. However, should the Committee delegate all authority under this Article to a Subcommittee whose decisions are irrevocable by the Worldcon Committee, then this exclusion shall apply to members of the Subcommittee only.

To avoid disqualifying the whole Committee – upwards of 200 people, most having nothing to do with the Hugos – the Worldcon chair generally appoints the fans who count the votes and apply the eligibility rules to a Subcommittee. So if some minor member of the concom wins a Hugo, as I did while serving as editor of L.A.con II’s daily newzine in 1984, it’s no problem.

From the beginning the WSFS Constitution (1962-1963) has banned all committee members from eligibility for the Hugos. To my knowledge, the rule was modified in the 1970s by adding the option of an autonomous Subcommittee. People thought it should have been unnecessary for Mike Glicksohn to resign from the TorCon 2 (1973) committee rather than forego the chance for his and Susan Wood Glicksohn’s Energumen to compete for the Hugo, which they indeed won.

The modified rule has worked to everyone’s satisfaction for a number of reasons having little to do with its precision. Worldcons once were commonly led by people also involved with Hugo contending fanzines, which has rarely happened in the past 40 years. On those rare occasions the people involved have taken it upon themselves to avoid any conflicts.

For example, many fans involved with running Noreascon Three (1989) wrote for The Mad 3 Party in the years leading up to the con. Edited by Leslie Turek, TM3P was nominated for Best Fanzine in 1988, withdrawn in 1989, and won a Hugo in 1990. Noreascon Three did appoint a Hugo Subcommittee, of unassailable integrity — in my mind, if TM3P had competed in 1989 and won a Hugo there would have been no reason to doubt the result. The committee, however, felt they needed to go beyond what was required in the rules to preserve an appearance of fairness and TM3P was withdrawn.

When I chaired L.A.con III (1996) friends reminded me that I could remain eligible for a Hugo by delegating responsibility for the awards to a Subcommittee. I felt invested in and responsible for everything that was happening with the con, so for me it was never an option to act as if the Hugos weren’t a part of that. I did appoint a Subcommittee – and put myself on it, announcing that I was withdrawing from the awards for 1996.

So the anti-conflict rule works because people make it work. It is not an infallible rule. In fact, I agree with a comment made by drplokta on Nicholas Whyte’s From the Heart of Europe that it would be hypothetically possible for something similar to this year’s BFA situation to play out in the Hugos without violating the rule.   

[Hugo Subcommittee members’] partners are eligible though, and I guess if a Hugo subcommittee member ran a publishing house then the books that they publish would be eligible, since the nomination would be for the author and not for the publisher.

In short, it’s a good rule to have, but it’s not all-encompassing as some have assumed in recommending it to fix the BFAs. 

The Hugo Awards Conflict of Interest Trivia Quiz: When I made my decision to withdraw in 1996 I doubted that other Worldcon chairs had ever faced the same choice. But they did. I’ll share what I’ve discovered in the answers to this two-question trivia quiz.

Question 1: How many times has the chair of the current year’s Worldcon won a Hugo?

(a) Once
(b) Twice
(c) Never

There’s been such controversy about the chair of the British Fantasy Society’s close association with 5 of this year’s award winners — for example, he is a partner in the publisher that won Best Small Press – that you’d have to assume it would be impossible for a Worldcon chairman to win a Hugo at his own con without raising a historic stink, right? Wrong.

Answer to Question 1: Once. Loncon I (1957) was chaired by Ted Carnell. The winner of the Hugo for Best British Professional Magazine was New Worlds edited by John Edward Carnell. The same person.

Ted Carnell is the only chair to win a Hugo at his own Worldcon. And it appears everyone was content. Harry Warner’s history of Fifties fandom, A Wealth of Fable, doesn’t contain the least hint of controversy. Neither do any of the conreports from Loncon I collected on Rob Hansen’s website.

Sometimes in the award’s early days the chair of the Worldcon administered the Hugos and counted the votes. That may not have been the case in 1957. The progress reports directed members to send their Achievement Award ballots to the convention secretary Roberta Wild. The chair winning a major award might still have been questioned but I’ve found no record of any complaint. In all my time in fandom I’ve never heard anybody say a bad word about that having happened.

Ted White, the 1967 Worldcon chair who responded to some questions for this article, agrees: “I have never heard anyone say anything disparaging about it either.  It was a bit too obviously deserved. Fandom was a lot smaller then, and even smaller in the UK.  Carnell wore several hats.  I met him in 1965. A quiet, unassuming, gentle and generous man.”

Question 2: How many times has a Worldcon chair won a Hugo the year before or after their con?

(a) 2
(b) 4
(c) 8

Answer to Question 2: 4 times.

Many Worldcon chairs and their committees were connected with award-winning fanzines over the years. Before the Internet that was the best medium for building fannish communities and wooing voters.  

(1) Wally Weber was a co-editor of Cry of the Nameless, the Best Fanzine Hugo winner in 1960, the year before he chaired Seacon (1961). Cry was not a nominee in 1961 but was back as a finalist in 1962. So was the zine kept out of contention the year they hosted the Worldcon? Wally Weber isn’t certain but he thinks they might have:

As for the 1961 Hugos, I remember a discussion and decision that Cry be disqualified due to the unusually large percentage of the eligible voters being from the Seattle area and who had never read a fanzine other than Cry. Unfortunately my memory is often more creative than accurate and I have no documentation to back that up. I do not even remember who participated in making the decision. I don’t even remember how the voting was done or who counted the ballots. Did we have official ballots? I would think such a decision would have been mentioned in one of the progress reports if, indeed, there actually had been such a decision. Maybe votes for Cry were just discarded during the counting processes.

(2) The 1961 fanzine Hugo winner was Earl Kemp’s Who Killed Science Fiction. The next year Kemp chaired Chicon III (1962). However, as I’m sure you already know, Who Killed Science Fiction was the most famous one-shot in the history of sf. It obviously wasn’t a factor in the Hugos when he chaired the Worldcon.

(3) George Scithers chaired Discon I (1963) in Washington, D.C. He edited Amra from 1959 to 1982. It won the Hugo in 1964. Since it had never been nominated for the Hugo in any prior year it’s difficult to guess whether he took any special steps to keep it off the ballot when he chaired the Worldcon in 1963. None of the committee members who might know are still with us – Scithers, Bob Pavlat and Dick Eney. One thing we do know is that he wouldn’t have permitted his zine to be placed on the ballot because he’s one of the people who helped write the anti-conflict rule into the original WSFS Constitution of 1962-1963.

(4) Ted White co-chaired NyCon 3 (1967), the Worldcon which originated the Best Fan Writer and Best Fan Artist Hugos. He also worked for F&SF at the time. Ted says: “F&SF withdrew itself; this was not a NyCon3 committee decision. Ed Ferman [the editor] had a nice sense of propriety.”

Ted says he didn’t take any steps to stay off the ballot in the fan categories the year he chaired the Worldcon. “I did not withdraw myself from the Fanwriter category (nor make any announcements to that effect) because I did not regard it as necessary. I wasn’t nominated that year, obviating the question.  My win the following year surprised me.” However, he probably did not need to make any announcement: people would have been aware of the anti-conflict rule in the Constitution.

White and F&SF both won Hugos the following year, 1968.

[Special thanks to Robert Lichtman and Ted White, as well as Darrell Schweitzer, Peggy Rae Sapienza, Michael J. Walsh, Elinor Busby and Wally Weber for their assistance in researching this article.]

Leinster, Dean of SF, Topic of 11/1 NYRSF Readings

Murray Leinster, known as “the Dean of Science Fiction” until his death in 1975, will be celebrated at the November 1 New York Review of Science Fiction Readings. Leinster was a nom de plume of William Fitzgerald Jenkins who wrote and published over 1,500 short stories and articles during a prolific career.

He is the subject of a recently published biography authored by his daughters. One of them, Billee Stallings, will participate. So will David G. Hartwell, a senior editor of Tor/Forge Books, Barry N. Malzberg, sf author and essayist, and Michael Swanwick, acclaimed winner of the Hugo, Nebula and Theodore Sturgeon Memorial awards

The full press release follows the jump.

[Thanks to Jim Freund for the story.]

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Norman Corwin (1910-2011)

Norman Corwin died October 18 of natural causes at the age of 101.

Ray Bradbury called Corwin “my dearest friend and greatest teacher” and said “I wrote The Martian Chronicles for him.”

The foundations of Corwin’s fame are his two radio programs that bookended World War II. In 1941, he wrote “We Hold These Truths,” a commemoration of the 150th anniversary of the Bill of Rights that aired simultaneously on all four radio networks days after the bombing of Pearl Harbor. In 1945, “On a Note of Triumph,” a reflection on the allied victory in Europe and the changing world, was broadcast nationwide on V-E Day.

Among Corwin’s other accomplishments, he wrote the Academy Award-nominated script for the 1956 film Lust for Life, a biography of Vincent van Gogh starring Kirk Douglas.

William Shatner, who narrated several of Corwin’s later radio programs, called him “the poetic soul of discretion and a monument to artistry in America.” Shatner participated in the California Artists Radio Theater production of Bradbury’s Leviathan ’99 mounted to celebrate Norman Corwin’s 99th birthday in 2009.

Bradbury has said of Corwin, “He taught us then not only how to open our mouths but how to insert bright pebbles beneath our tongues so that eventually we might fire forth a sentence not only worth listening to but thinking about.”

1986 Zelazny Reading on YouTube

Roger Zelazny’s reading at the 4th Street Fantasy Convention in 1986 has been posted by Baron DavE Romm on YouTube. The videotapes originally were made for airing by the Minneapolis Television Network, a local cable access channel. Then (as it says in the intro) the tapes were stacked in DavE’s closet awaiting the Digital Revolution.

Zelazny’s initial reading is frequently interrupted by laughter – for good reason. “LOKI 7281” is a very funny story. Here’s the brief summary from a NESFA website:

Roger Zelazny’s home computer is sentient. This was an accident but is also true of many of this model who are now in the homes of many of the leading SF writers. The computer is rewriting his books to make them more salable. When the writer finds out he tries to destroy the machine. The machine, in concert with its siblings, plan to murder the writers and keep this secret. They will tell whoever is curious that the writers are off at an SF convention, somewhere.

DavE has plans to post more of these old videos, digitized by Beth Friedman, including one featuring Jane Yolen.

[Via Andrew Porter and Geri Sullivan.]

Hamit and Strother-Vien Recovering

When I saw them on the last day of Renovation, Francis Hamit and Leigh Strother-Vien were just fine. They gave me a review copy of The Queen of Washington, Francis’ new Civil War/espionage/alternate history novel. Unfortunately, soon afterwards they were struck by a sudden and severe illness:

A day after Leigh and I returned from our six-weeks long road trip we were mugged by a gang of microbes and given a new kind of pneumonia that they are still trying to figure out. We thought it was flu and would be gone in a few days. It wasn’t and was not. On September 30th we went to the ER at the VA hospital in Westwood. Leigh was released, although still very ill and I was admitted, to spend a week on IV fluids and antibiotics and oxygen before I could again breathe well enough to go home. We are told we will be weeks, possibly months recovering and are relying on our part timer to do a lot of things we normally do ourselves as a matter of routine. We have canceled all events just as the next book The Queen of Washington is about to be released. 

Apparently someone at Amazon.com decided this book will be a best seller. They are pricing it at 34% off. An almost eleven dollar savings off the $32.00 price of the hardbound. Barnes & Noble and Books-A-Million have similar offers. We are pleasantly perplexed by this since we get the same money per copy back. The discount is out of their end I’m assuming that the five star reviews for The Shenandoah Spy helped drive this decision.  Here is a link to their page for The Queen of Washington.

As for the health crisis it is one. I damn near died. Almost beat Steve Jobs to the exit door. It gave me a lot of time to think. In the meantime, people of good will, who want to help us out a bit need only buy the new book on the offers mentioned above. Sales beget sales. And if you haven’t read The Shenandoah Spy please consider buying that as well. It’s still in print and in e-book formats.

Francis also says he is willing to send review copies of The Queen of Washington to qualified reviewers. It does slip into the “Alternative History” sub-genre of S-F, so those reviewers are welcome. Contact him via e-mail — Francishamit (at) earthlink (dot) net.

WSFA Votes Award to Carrie Vaughn

The Washington Science Fiction Association has given the 2011 WSFA Small Press Award for Short Fiction to “Amaryllis” by Carrie Vaughn, published in Lightspeed Magazine (June 2010), edited by John Joseph Adams.

The announcement was made this past weekend at Capclave, where Vaughn was a guest of honor. Michael J. Walsh explains, “While some may raise an eyebrow over one of the GoHs winning the award, I will note that winner was selected by vote of WSFA members who participate in a blind judging process — reading the texts with identity of the author, publisher and editor removed.”

Graeme: CFF Award Certificates in the Mail

By R. Graeme Cameron: Taral Wayne has completed the Certificates for the winners of the 2011 Canadian Fanzine Fanac Awards. Copies have already been emailed to the winners, to be followed up by hard copies printed on acid-free 25% cotton paper. I attach a copy of the Life-Time Achievement certificate as an example.

I requested the certificate show a 1950s style astronaut (with a mimeo for his back pack) gazing over an alien terrain, with any bits of SF business Taral might care to add in homage to SF TV, Film, Comics, Movies, etc. He put in ten that I can see. I list them at the end of this article.

Taral has produced a wonderful piece of art that captures the wimsey, fun, and joy of fanzine publishing. I’m blown away by it. More than I expected. I am confident that future winners of the ‘Faneds’ will be pleased to receive these certificates in the years to come.

Note that the actual ‘Faned’ Award figure is still being sculpted by Lawrence Prime and is coming along quite nicely as depicted on the cover of my Fanactical Fanactivist #5.

Cheers!   Graeme (CFFA Administrator)

1)      Upper left corner – Avro Arrow.
2)      On planetary rings – Red Dwarf space bug.
3)      In helmet – shock of hair  = Tin Tin.
4)      Beneath backpack – Kirk vs. Gorn.
5)      To right of knees – City from The Jetsons.
6)      Next right – Apes & 2001 Monolith.
7)      Next right – Galileo 7 Shuttle from Star Trek.
8)      Next right – Tardis from Dr. Who.
9)      Next right – Robot from Roger Ramjet.
10)   Below – Barlennan from ‘Mission of Gravity’.