The Arthur C. Clarke Award
@clarkeaward.bsky.social
4.1K followers 860 following 210 posts
The Arthur C. Clarke Award science fiction book of the year. clarkeaward.com
Posts Media Videos Starter Packs
Pinned
clarkeaward.bsky.social
Hope in Fiction,

Are we living in the darkest timeline? Probably.

Can storytelling still inspire us? Absolutely.

Is the future set? You tell us.

These collections from our Clarke Award authors may just be the creative fire you were looking for!

👉 uk.bookshop.org/lists/hope-i...
Text: hope in fiction. short story collections to inspire
clarkeaward.bsky.social
“I’ve seen things you people wouldn’t believe…”

… including this great Blade Runner inspired art piece spotted at London’s Other Art Fair by artist Fletcher Sibthorp!

#TearsinRain
Artist Fletcher Sibthorp with his painting of the origami unicorn from Blade Runner Painting of the origami unicorn from Ridley Scott’s Blade Runner by artist fletchersibthorp.com
clarkeaward.bsky.social
Hope in Fiction,

Are we living in the darkest timeline? Probably.

Can storytelling still inspire us? Absolutely.

Is the future set? You tell us.

These collections from our Clarke Award authors may just be the creative fire you were looking for!

👉 uk.bookshop.org/lists/hope-i...
Text: hope in fiction. short story collections to inspire
clarkeaward.bsky.social
Hope in Fiction,

Are we living in the darkest timeline? Probably.

Can storytelling still inspire us? Absolutely?

Is the future set? You tell us.

These collections from our Clarke Award authors may just be the creative fire you were looking for!

👉 uk.bookshop.org/lists/hope-i...
Text: Hope in Fiction. Short story collections to inspire
Reposted by The Arthur C. Clarke Award
rhi.bsky.social
Dad’s books are full of empathy, common sense, and a healthy suspicion of the powerful. But at its heart his work is also about how systems keep people poor while pretending it’s their own fault. So I hope Kemi’s taking notes as well as reading the jokes.
paulhaine.bsky.social
Kemi Badenoch claiming Terry Pratchett as her favourite author is wild
Reposted by The Arthur C. Clarke Award
dreamwisp.bsky.social
Because it feels relevant as we continue to evaluate the media and our representatives’ statements, my favorite way to identify the active vs. passive voice.
A post by Rebecca Johnson:
“I finally learned how to teach my guys to ID the passive voice. If you can insert "by zombies" after the verb, you have passive voice.”

A tumblr respond from mightymur:
“The final, brilliant word on passive voice.
"She was killed [by zombies.]"<--passive
"Zombies killed [by zombies] her." <-- active”
Reposted by The Arthur C. Clarke Award
tinywriterlaura.bsky.social
I had such a great time writing this piece for Reactor! one of the great things about publishing a book is people let you write about things you’re vaguely obsessed with
reactorsff.bsky.social
Drawing from stories such as Hiron Ennes' Leech and Kazuo Ishiguro's Never Let Me Go, author @tinywriterlaura.bsky.social reviews the popularity of medical horror, placing it alongside the return of dystopian fiction:

reactormag.com/dystopian-me...
Dystopian Medicine: Why Medical Horror Has a Hold on Us - Reactor
When society feels at its most unstable, we find ourselves turning to the darker genres of fiction...
reactormag.com
Reposted by The Arthur C. Clarke Award
angryrobotbooks.bsky.social
"Today we live in a society in which spurious realities are manufactured by the media, by governments, by big corporations, by religious groups, political groups... So I ask, in my writing, what is real?"

Philip K. Dick
Reposted by The Arthur C. Clarke Award
plashingvole.bsky.social
In a woodcut released today the Guild of Thieves and Cutpurses declared that enforcement of regulations against Thieving and Pursecutting would ‘devastate a growth industry’ and damage the economy.
clarkeaward.bsky.social
Ah but that’s a very good find though.
Reposted by The Arthur C. Clarke Award
gavreads.co.uk
A worthy winner. It raises a concern about modern society, explores a semi-plausible scenario (that Greer manages to make creepier than I imagined by the end), and it made me think.
clarkeaward.bsky.social
📣 Did you hear that @bookshop-org-uk.bsky.social now offers ebooks?

If you're looking for an excuse to check them out (like you need one) we should also flag that this year's Clarke Award winner ANNIE BOT is only 99p on their site right now!

👉 uk.bookshop.org/a/14057/9780...
Cover of Annie Bot by Sierra Greer, winner of the 2025 Arthur C. Clarke Award science fiction book of the year
clarkeaward.bsky.social
📣 Did you hear that @bookshop-org-uk.bsky.social now offers ebooks?

If you're looking for an excuse to check them out (like you need one) we should also flag that this year's Clarke Award winner ANNIE BOT is only 99p on their site right now!

👉 uk.bookshop.org/a/14057/9780...
Cover of Annie Bot by Sierra Greer, winner of the 2025 Arthur C. Clarke Award science fiction book of the year
Reposted by The Arthur C. Clarke Award
gavreads.co.uk
This is a very worth while read.
clarkeaward.bsky.social
📣 Did you hear that @bookshop-org-uk.bsky.social now offers ebooks?

If you're looking for an excuse to check them out (like you need one) we should also flag that this year's Clarke Award winner ANNIE BOT is only 99p on their site right now!

👉 uk.bookshop.org/a/14057/9780...
cover of Annie Bot by Sierra Greer, winner of the Arthur C. Clarke Award science fiction book of the year 2025
clarkeaward.bsky.social
📣 Did you hear that @bookshop-org-uk.bsky.social now offers ebooks?

If you're looking for an excuse to check them out (like you need one) we should also flag that this year's Clarke Award winner ANNIE BOT is only 99p on their site right now!

👉 uk.bookshop.org/a/14057/9780...
cover of Annie Bot by Sierra Greer, winner of the Arthur C. Clarke Award science fiction book of the year 2025
Reposted by The Arthur C. Clarke Award
stewarthotston.com
Project Hanuman is out on November 11th. Today, I wanted to highlight that the gent that is @justinleeanderson.com gave it this summary: Battlestar Galactica crossed with The Matrix on a heavy dose of LSD.

Which, honestly, will do for me. #sff #sciencefiction #scifi
Reposted by The Arthur C. Clarke Award
northodoxpress.bsky.social
UK based SFF reviewers: we need you!

We have a few unclaimed review copies left of both these brand new titles!

If epic fantasy or unusual, character driven scifi is your thing, get in touch for a copy. Strictly first come, first served ⚔️🚀
Reposted by The Arthur C. Clarke Award
adapalmer.bsky.social
Exceptional Doctorow piece on the solar rollout, why it's unstoppable, & why many old downsides of solar aren't factors anymore. The entire material mining needed 4 a global solar transition = only 17% of the fossil fuel mining we do every year! & then we're done! doctorow.medium.com/https-plural...
Decarbonization at a distance
A post-American century that runs on sunshine.
doctorow.medium.com
Reposted by The Arthur C. Clarke Award
ursulakleguin.com
Vajra Chandrasekera (@vajra.me) introduces his second novel, Rakesfall, which is is shortlisted for the 2025 Ursula K. Le Guin Prize for Fiction.

For more about this year's shortlist: www.ursulakleguin.com/prize25
Vajra Chandrasekera reads from Rakesfall
YouTube video by Ursula K. Le Guin Foundation
www.youtube.com
Reposted by The Arthur C. Clarke Award
Reposted by The Arthur C. Clarke Award
colinthecopywriter.bsky.social
Blurbs in the wild (1/2):
'Which they were. But now they are not.'

These two short, plain sentences early in the blurb for @headofzeus.bsky.social and @kellylink.bsky.social The Book of Love provide the hinge for this pitch. Three dead teenagers are no longer dead – why? A subtle, surprising . . .
Kelly Link's The Book of Love Blurb: Laura, Daniel and Mo disappeared without trace a year ago. They have long been presumed dead. Which they were. But now they are not. And it is up to the resurrected teenagers to discover what happened to them.Revived by Mr Anabin - the man they knew as their high school music teacher - they are offered a chance to return to the mortal realm and solve the mystery of their death. But only two of them may stay. What they do not realise is their return has upset a delicate balance that has held - just - for centuries.
Reposted by The Arthur C. Clarke Award
escapepod.org
If you're not a supporter of Escape Pod and you're looking to be, lock in your subscription before October 1st, lest you hear the ads crackling against the cosmic microwave background. More details here! www.patreon.com/posts/lock-i...
Escape With Us