Crawford Award Winner,
Shortlist Announced
The winner of the 2008 Crawford
Fantasy Award is Christopher Barzak, for his first
novel One for Sorrow (Bantam). The award, sponsored by the International
Association for the Fantastic in the Arts, recognizes an outstanding first book
of fantasy published during the preceding year, and will be presented March 22
at the association’s annual conference in
In a departure from past years, the Association has simultaneously released the winner along with the shortlist for the award. Other titles on this year’s shortlist are Laird Barron, The Imago Sequence (Night Shade); Ron Currie, Jr., God is Dead (Viking); Ellen Klages, Portable Childhoods (Tachyon); and Ysabeau Wilce, Flora Segunda (Harcourt). Ekaterina Sedia’s The Secret History of Moscow, praised by a number of the award nominators, was ineligible for the shortlist because of an earlier fantasy novel published by Sedia in 2005.
Instead of a formal committee structure, the Crawford Award is determined by a panel of nominators, who review and discuss each other’s nominations. This year’s panel included John Clute, Kelly Link, Farah Mendlesohn, Cheryl Morgan, and Graham Sleight. The award is administered by Gary K. Wolfe of the IAFA Board.
The Crawford Award was established
in 1985 through a grant from Andre Norton in memory of early fantasy small-press
publisher William L. Crawford, who had died the preceding year. Past winners have included Charles de Lint,
Susan Palwick, Greer Gilman, Jonathan Lethem, Candas Jane Dorsey, Alexander Irvine, Steph
Swainston, and Joe Hill. Last year’s winner was M. Rickert.