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  1. Robert J. Sawyer is one of only eight writers in history — and the only Canadian — to win all three of the world’s top Science Fiction awards for best novel of the year: the Hugo, the Nebula, and the John W. Campbell Memorial Award (the full list of such winners: Paolo Bacigalupi, David Brin, Arthur C. Clarke, Joe Haldeman, Frederik Pohl ...

  2. 30 de ago. de 2003 · Robert J. Sawyer's Hominids today won the Hugo Award — the world's top honour in science fiction — for Best Novel of the Year. The Hugos are nominated for and voted on by the 5,000 members of the World Science Fiction Society, and presented at that organization's annual conference, the World Science Fiction Convention — which ...

  3. Robert A. Heinlein has won the most Hugos for Best Novel, and also received the most nominations; he has six wins (four Hugos and two Retro-Hugos) on twelve nominations. Lois McMaster Bujold has received four Hugos on ten nominations.

  4. www.sfwriter.com › 2008 › 05Robert J. Sawyer

    28 de may. de 2008 · The least-well-known Hugo-winning novel. As a best-novel Hugo Award-winner myself (not to mention a current nominee in that category), I like to think that winning SF's big one ensures immortality for the book.

  5. I started this 2003 Hugo winner with a great deal of anticipation, probably for all the wrong reasons. After having immediately judged the book by its cover, I was excited - we get Neanderthals and neutrino physics, two subjects that I find (possibly inappropriately) badass.

  6. 3 de may. de 2002 · Humanity’s destructive tendencies is one of the main themes of Hominids, Robert J. Sawyer’s Hugo award-winning novel about the adventures of a Neanderthal, Ponter Boddit, who inadvertently arrived in our world.

  7. robertjsawyer.substack.com › p › the-downloaded-print-and-ebook-editionsThe Downloaded print and ebook editions

    27 de mar. de 2024 · “Hope wins out in this triumph of a postapocalyptic tale from Hugo and Nebula award winner Sawyer. Sawyer keeps the stakes climbing ever higher as he toggles between the perspectives of his disparate cast.