2023 Aurora Awards Ceremony Livestream Links

The Canadian Science Fiction and Fantasy Association invites everyone to view the livestream of this year’s Aurora Awards Ceremony on YouTube and Facebook. It takes place August 19 starting at 7:00 Eastern (5:00 p.m. Mountain, 4:00 p.m. Pacific).

Here are the links:
 
YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3FlRl0g279U
 
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/events/2014114358935372

The theme this year is Retro. The awards will be introduced by past Aurora Award winners. (Some of them won when the awards were called the Caspers.)

  • Best Novel: Candas Jane Dorsey who won for her novel, Black Wine, in 1998.
  • Best YA Novel: Kelley Armstrong who won for her YA Novel, The Rising, in 2014
  • Best Novelette/Novella: Robert J. Sawyer who has won more Auroras and Caspers than any other nominee.
  • Best Short Story: Karl Schroeder who won for Short Fiction, “The Toy Mill” with David Nickel in 1993
  • Best Graphic Novel/Comic: Alina Pete who won for her webcomic Weregeek in 2013
  • Best Poem/Song: David Clink who won for his poem, “A sea monster tells his story”, in 2013
  • Best Related Work: Karl Johanson who won for his magazine, Neo-Opsis in 2009.
  • Best Cover Art/Interior Illustration: Lar deSouza who won for artistic achievement in 2006
  • Best Fan Writing/Publication: Michael Skeet who won for his fanzine MLR (Maple Leaf Rag) in 1998
  • Best Fan Related Work: Cath Jackel who won in 1995 for her parties at ConAdian WorldCon in Winnipeg.

The ceremony will begin with the induction of three new members of the CSFFA Hall of Fame:

  • John Robert Colombo
  • Michelle Sagara
  • Clifford Samuels

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One thought on “2023 Aurora Awards Ceremony Livestream Links

  1. There’s a typo in the original posting from the CSFFA, repeated here. John Robert Colombo’s last name is correctly spelled like the capital of Sri Lanka, not like the TV detective. 🙂

    I was one of those who nominated John Robert Colombo for the CSFFA Hall of Fame. Here’s my letter of nomination:

    It is my privilege and honour to nominate John Robert Colombo for the Canadian Science Fiction and Fantasy Hall of Fame. I am nominating him in the “non-writer” category, as he is principally an editor and compiler.

    http://colombo.ca

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Robert_Colombo

    https://www.thecanadianencyclopedia.ca/en/article/john-robert-colombo

    John is a towering presence in Canadian letters. He is a member of the Order of Canada and is Canada’s premiere folklorist and collector and compiler of Canadiana (best known for his seminal COLOMBO’S CANADIAN QUOTATIONS and its sequels) as well as a significant poet, broadcaster, publisher, and publisher.

    Although he has over 200 books to his credit, it is his twenty pioneering works in the field of Canadian speculative fiction that are my reasons for nominating him, most significantly his massive historical retrospective OTHER CANADAS: AN ANTHOLOGY OF SCIENCE FICTION AND FANTASY, published in 1979, forty-four years ago, by McGraw-Hill Ryerson. It was the first-ever anthology of Canadian science fiction and fantasy, a beautiful hardcover gathering 21 fiction pieces and 28 poems drawn from 400 years of Canadian history:

    https://isfdb.org/cgi-bin/pl.cgi?264107

    Prior to that book, no one had made the case that there was such a thing as Canadian science fiction and fantasy: it was John who proved to Canada’s publishers, editors, academics, writers, and readers that the field actually existed. When my wife Carolyn and I edited TESSERACTS 6, we dedicated the book thus:

    “To John Robert Colombo, whose pioneering OTHER CANADAS blazed the trail for all the Canadian science fiction and fantasy anthologists who followed.”

    Among John’s other significant genre books are:

    • MOSTLY MONSTERS (1977), a collection of “found poetry” — prose text that Colombo has rearranged as verse, gathered mostly from SF sources;

    • FRIENDLY ALIENS (1981), a collection of thirteen SF stories by foreign authors set in Canada;

    • YEARS OF LIGHT: A CELEBRATION OF LESLIE A. CROUTCH (1982), a biography of Canadian fanzine publisher Croutch (1915-1969), as well as a general look at SF fandom in Canada;

    • WORLDS IN SMALL (1992), an anthology of stories of fifty words or less, most of which are SF; and

    • TESSERACTS 14: STRANGE CANADIAN STORIES (2010, co-editor).

    John has also published several significant genre bibliographies and he has the distinction of being the first-ever academic keynote speaker at a World Science Fiction Convention, the 2009 Worldcon in Montreal.

    His manuscripts and papers, certified as being of “outstanding significance and national importance” by the federal government’s Canadian Cultural Property Export Review Board, are housed at the McMaster University library, alongside those of Pierre Berton, Margaret Laurence, Farley Mowat, Canadian publisher Jack McClelland, Bertrand Russell, myself, and — yes — H.G. Wells:

    https://archives.mcmaster.ca/index.php/john-robert-colombo-fonds

    John was instrumental in founding, in 1982, what was then called The Friends of the Spaced-Out Library, and is now The Friends of the Merril Collection of Science Fiction, Speculation and Fantasy. He was also a mainstay of Hydra North (later renamed Ontario Hydra), Canada’s first association of SF&F professionals, hosting seven of that organization’s 38 meetings in his home:

    https://sfwriter.com/hydra.htm

    And, on a personal note, John was the first member of the Canadian literary establishment to take my own contributions to science fiction seriously. In 1982, he published new stories by myself and two other then-emerging writers, Andrew Weiner and Terence M. Green, in LEISURE WAYS, the magazine of the Canadian Automobile Association:

    https://sfwriter.com/leisurew.htm

    Born in Kitchener, Ontario, in 1936, turning 87 years young on March 24, 2023, and still active, it’s high time that John Robert Colombo be inducted into the Canadian Science Fiction and Fantasy Hall of Fame, which, after all, honours a field of literature that he himself was the very first person to ever recognize.

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