Geek Feminism Wiki

One of the three most prestigious science fiction and fantasy awards (along with the Hugo and Nebula).

Trigger warning: the following articles discuss H.P. Lovedraft's racism.

The award statue is a caricature of H.P. Lovecraft. Daniel Jose Older proposed to have it changed to Octavia Butler.


Women Winners for Best Novel

  • 1975: Patricia A. McKillip, The Forgotten Beasts of Eld
  • 1980: Elizabeth A. Lynn, Watchtower
  • 1991: Ellen Kushner, Thomas the Rhymer (co-winner)
  • 1997: Rachel Pollack, Godmother Night
  • 1999: Louise Erdrich, The Antelope Wife
  • 2002: Ursula K. Le Guin, The Other Wind
  • 2003: Patricia A. McKillip, Ombria in Shadow (co-winner)
  • 2004: Jo Walton, Tooth and Claw
  • 2005: Susanna Clarke, Jonathan Strange & Mr Norrell
  • 2009: Margo Lanagan, Tender Morsels (co-winner)
  • 2011: Nnedi Okorafor, Who Fears Death
  • 2013: G. Willow Wilson, Alif the Unseen

Women Winners for Best Novella

Women Winners for Best Short Story

  • 1983: Tanith Lee, "The Gorgon"
  • 1984: Tanith Lee, "Elle Est Trois, (La Mort)"
  • 1996: Gwyneth Jones, "The Grass Princess"
  • 1998: P. D. Cacek, "Dust Motes"
  • 1999: Kelly Link, "The Specialist's Hat"
  • 2005: Margo Lanagan, "Singing My Sister Down"
  • 2007: M. Rickert, "Journey Into the Kingdom"
  • 2008: Theodora Goss, "Singing of Mount Abora"
  • 2009: Kij Johnson, "26 Monkeys, Also the Abyss"
  • 2010: Karen Joy Fowler, "The Pelican Bar"
  • 2011: Joyce Carol Oates, "Fossil-Figures"

Women Winners for Best Artist

  • 2011: Kinuko Y. Craft

Women Winners for Best Anthology

  • 2004: Strange Tales, edited by Rosalie Parker
  • 2005: Acquainted with the Night, edited by Barbara & Christopher Roden (co-winner)
  • 2005: Dark Matter: Reading the Bones, edited by Sheree R. Thomas (co-winner)
  • 2007: Salon Fantastique, edited by Ellen Datlow and Terri Windling
  • 2008: Inferno: New Tales of Terror and the Supernatural, edited by Ellen Datlow
  • 2009: Paper Cities: An Anthology of Urban Fantasy, edited by Ekaterina Sedia
  • 2011: My Mother She Killed Me, My Father He Ate Me, edited by Kate Bernheimer
  • 2012: The Weird, Ann VanderMeer(co-editor)

Women Winners for Best Collection

  • 1980: Jessica Amanda Salmonson (editor), Amazons!
  • 1982: Terri Windling (editor), Elsewhere
  • 1986: Robin McKinley (editor), Imaginary Lands
  • 1987: James Tiptree, Jr., Tales of the Quintana Roo
  • 1991: Carol Emshwiller, The Start of the End of It All and Other Stories
  • 1996: Gwyneth Jones, Seven Tales and a Fable
  • 1999: Karen Joy Fowler, Black Glass
  • 2002: Nalo Hopkinson, Skin Folk
  • 2004: Elizabeth Hand, Bibliomancy
  • 2005: Margo Lanagan, Black Juice
  • 2007: M. Rickert, Map of Dreams
  • 2010: Lyudmila Petrushevskaya, There Once Lived a Woman Who Tried To Kill Her Neighbor's Baby: Scary Fairy Tales

Women Winners for Life Achievement

  • 1981: C.L. Moore
  • 1989: Evangeline Walton
  • 1995: Ursula K. Le Guin
  • 1997: Madeleine L'Engle
  • 1998: Andre Norton
  • 2000: Marion Zimmer Bradley
  • 2005: Carol Emshwiller
  • 2007: Betty Ballantine
  • 2007: Diana Wynne Jones
  • 2008: Diane Dillon (with Leo Dillon)
  • 2008: Patricia A. McKillip
  • 2009: Ellen Asher
  • 2009: Jane Yolen
  • 2011: Angélica Gorodischer
  • 2013: Susan Cooper
  • 2013: Tanith Lee
  • 2014: Ellen Datlow
  • 2014: Chelsea Quinn Yarbro

Women Winners the Special Award: Professional

  • 2007: Ellen Asher (for work at SFBC)
  • 2009: Kelly Link (for Small Beer Press and Big Mouth House) along with Gavin J. Grant

Women Winners of the Special Award: Non-Professional

  • 2004: Rosalie Parker (for Tartarus Press) along with R.B. Russell
  • 2008: Midori Snyder and Terri Windling (for Endicott Studios Website)
  • 2010: Susan Marie Groppi (for Strange Horizons)
  • 2011: Alisa Krasnostein (for Twelfth Planet Press)