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词条 Kurd Laßwitz Award
释义

  1. Award Winners

      German-language Novel    Foreign Work    German-language Short Fiction (since 1997)  

  2. Further categories

  3. See also

  4. References

  5. External links

The Kurd Laßwitz Award ({{lang-de|Kurd-Laßwitz-Preis}}) is possibly the best-known science fiction award from Germany. The award is named after the science fiction author Kurd Laßwitz. Eligible for nomination in all categories except for the Foreign Work category are only works published in German originally.[1]

Wolfgang Jeschke has won the award 19 times in four different categories[2], while Andreas Eschbach has won the prize 9 times in two different categories[3]. The foreign-language category includes novels, stories, collections and non-fiction. Iain Banks and China Miéville won the foreign-language prize four times.[4][5] Other authors to win multiple times are Hans Joachim Alpers, Carl Amery, Herbert W. Franke, Ian McDonald, Michael Marrak, and Connie Willis[6].

Award Winners

German-language Novel

This category includes German-language works with a length of at least 100 pages by German-language authors which were published in German on a German-language market professionally for the first time in the award year.[1]

  • 1981: Georg Zauner, Die Enkel der Raketenbauer
  • 1982: Wolfgang Jeschke, The Last Day of Creation
  • 1983: Richard Hey, Im Jahr 95 nach Hiroshima
  • 1984: Thomas R. P. Mielke, Das Sakriversum
  • 1985: Herbert W. Franke, Die Kälte des Weltraums
  • 1986: Herbert W. Franke, Endzeit
  • 1987: Carl Amery, Die Wallfahrer
  • 1988: Gudrun Pausewang, Die Wolke
  • 1989: Norbert Stöbe, New York ist himmlisch
  • 1990: Wolfgang Jeschke, Midas
  • 1991: Carl Amery, Das Geheimnis der Krypta
  • 1992: Christian Mähr, Fatous Staub
  • 1993: Herbert Rosendorfer, Die goldenen Heiligen oder Columbus entdeckt Europa
  • 1994: Thomas Ziegler, Die Stimmen der Nacht
  • 1995: Hans Joachim Alpers, Das zerrissene Land
  • 1996: Hans Joachim Alpers, Die graue Eminenz
  • 1997: Andreas Eschbach, Solarstation
  • 1998: No Award
  • 1999: Andreas Eschbach, Jesus Video
  • 2000: Andreas Eschbach, Kelwitts Stern
  • 2001: Michael Marrak, Lord Gamma
  • 2002: Andreas Eschbach, Quest
  • 2003: Michael Marrak, Imagon
  • 2004: Andreas Eschbach, Der Letzte seiner Art
  • 2005: Frank Schätzing, The Swarm
  • 2006: Wolfgang Jeschke, Das Cusanus-Spiel
  • 2007: Herbert W. Franke, Auf der Spur des Engels
  • 2008: Andreas Eschbach, Ausgebrannt
  • 2009: Dietmar Dath, Die Abschaffung der Arten
  • 2010: Andreas Eschbach, Ein König für Deutschland
  • 2011: Uwe Post, Walpar Tonnraffir und der Zeigefinger Gottes
  • 2012: Andreas Eschbach, Herr aller Dinge
  • 2013: Dietmar Dath, Pulsarnacht
  • 2014: Wolfgang Jeschke, Dschiheads
  • 2015: Tom Hillenbrand, Drohnenland
  • 2016: Andreas Brandhorst. Das Schiff
  • 2017: Andreas Brandhorst. Omni
  • 2018: Michael Marrak. Der Kanon mechanischer Seelen

Foreign Work

This category includes foreign-language fiction and non-fiction which was published as a German translation for the first time in the award year. Until 1997, it was called Foreign Novel.[1]

  • 1984: Brian Aldiss, Helliconia Spring
  • 1985: Philip K. Dick, VALIS
  • 1986: Daniel Keyes, The Minds of Billy Milligan
  • 1987: Jerry Yulsman, Elleander Morning
  • 1988: Christopher Priest, The Glamour
  • 1989: Orson Scott Card, Speaker for the Dead
  • 1990: Lucius Shepard, Life During Wartime
  • 1991: Iain M. Banks, The Bridge
  • 1992: Iain M. Banks, The Wasp Factory
  • 1993: Iain M. Banks, Use of Weapons
  • 1994: Connie Willis, Doomsday Book
  • 1995: Ian McDonald, Scissors Cut Paper Wrap Stone
  • 1996: Stephen Baxter, The Time Ships
  • 1997: Kate Wilhelm, A Mystery of Chaos
  • 1998: Iain M. Banks, Excession
  • 1999: Ian McDonald, Sacrifice of Fools
  • 2000: Greg Egan, Distress
  • 2001: Mary Doria Russell, The Sparrow
  • 2002: Connie Willis, To Say Nothing of the Dog
  • 2003: China Miéville, Perdido Street Station
  • 2004: Vernor Vinge, A Deepness in the Sky
  • 2005: China Miéville, The Scar
  • 2006: China Miéville, Iron Council
  • 2007: Robert Charles Wilson, Spin
  • 2008: Sergey Lukyanenko, Spectrum
  • 2009: Charles Stross, Glasshouse
  • 2010: John Scalzi, The Android's Dream
  • 2011: China Miéville, The City & the City
  • 2012: Paolo Bacigalupi, The Windup Girl
  • 2013: Ted Chiang, Die Hölle ist die Abwesenheit Gottes (original collection)
  • 2014: Jo Walton, Among Others
  • 2015: Ursula K. Le Guin, Paradises Lost
  • 2016: Neal Stephenson, Seveneves
  • 2017: Cixin Liu, The Three Body Problem
  • 2018: Nnedi Okorafor, The Book of Phoenix

German-language Short Fiction (since 1997)

This category includes German-language works with a length of less than 100 pages by German-language authors which were published in German on a German-language market professionally for the first time in the award year, i.e. it includes short stories and novelettes/novellas combined in one award category. From 1997-2007 it was called German-language Short Story (though it also included novelettes/novellas already). From 1981–1996 this category was split into two separate award categories for Novellette/Novella and Short Story.[1]

  • 1997: Wolfgang Jeschke, Partner fürs Leben
  • 1998: Malte S. Sembten, Blind Date
  • 1999: Marcus Hammerschmitt, Wüstenlack
  • 2000: Wolfgang Jeschke, Die Cusanische Acceleratio
  • 2001: Marcus Hammerschmitt, Troubadoure
  • 2002: Wolfgang Jeschke, Allah akbar And So Smart Our NLWs
  • 2003: Erik Simon, Spiel beendet, sagte der Sumpf
  • 2004: Angela Steinmüller and Karlheinz Steinmüller, Vor der Zeitreise
  • 2005: Wolfgang Jeschke, Das Geschmeide
  • 2006: Rainer Erler, An e-Star is born
  • 2007: Marcus Hammerschmitt, Canea Null
  • 2008: Michael K. Iwoleit, Der Moloch
  • 2009: Andreas Eschbach, Survival-Training and Heidrun Jänchen, Ein Geschäft wie jedes andere
  • 2010: Ernst-Eberhard Manski, Das Klassentreffen der Weserwinzer
  • 2011: Michael K. Iwoleit, Die Schwelle
  • 2012: Frank W. Haubold, Am Ende der Reise
  • 2013: Klaus N. Frick, Im Käfig
  • 2014: Michael Marrak, Coen Sloterdykes diametral levitierendes Chronoversum
  • 2015: Fabian Tomaschek, Boatpeople
  • 2016: Karsten Kruschel, Was geschieht dem Licht am Ende des Tunnels?
  • 2017: Gabriele Behrend, Suicide Rooms
  • 2018: Uwe Hermann, Das Internet der Dinge

Further categories

  • Graphic Artist (1981-1992)
  • Graphic Artwork (since 1993)
  • Translator (1981-1992)
  • Translation (since 1993)
  • Movie (1987–1996)
  • Radio Drama
  • Special Award for Extraordinary Accomplishments

See also

  • Deutscher Science Fiction Preis
{{Science fiction}}

References

1. ^Information about the categories on the Kurd Laßwitz Award homepage (German)
2. ^Wolfgang Jeschke's awards page at the ISFDB
3. ^Andreas Eschbach's awards page at the ISFDB
4. ^Iain M. Banks' awards page at the ISFDB
5. ^China Miéville's awards page at the ISFDB
6. ^Kurd Laßwitz Award at the ISFDB

External links

  • {{Official website|http://www.kurd-lasswitz-preis.de/}}
  • Kurd Laßwitz Award at the Internet Speculative Fiction Database
{{DEFAULTSORT:Kurd-Lasswitz-Preis}}

3 : German science fiction awards|German literary awards|Awards established in 1981

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