Share This
Hugo Award for Best Fanzine
The Hugo Award for Best Fanzine is given annually to fanzines. These are amateur magazines for science fiction/fantasy-related subject, which do not pay their contributors. Fanzines are generally produced out of the love of the genre, its authors, books and films. Historically, fanzines were...
Learn more about Hugo Award for Best Fanzine »
Add More Topics
Save this view to a base, or just for yourself.
27 Award-Winning Work topics matching:
Filter this CollectionFantasy Times
Awards Won:
Science-Fiction Times
Awards Won:
Fanac
Awards Won:
Cry of the Nameless
Awards Won:
Warhoon
Awards Won:
Xero
Xero was a science fiction fanzine edited and published from 1960 to 1963 by Dick Lupoff, Pat Lupoff and Bhob Stewart. With a main focus on science fiction and comic books, Xero also featured essays, satire, articles, poetry, artwork and cartoons on...
Awards Won:
Yandro
Yandro was an influential science fiction fanzine published from 1953-1986 by Buck and Juanita Coulson. Over that period, they published 259 issues, the final issue not being distributed until 1991. Yandro's content covered a broad spectrum of...
Awards Won:
ERB-dom
ERB-dom began as a mimeographed science-fiction fanzine created by Al Guillory, Jr. and Camille Cazedessus Jr. ("Caz") in May 1960.
Guillory was killed in a car-train collision, but Cazedessus continued publishing ERB-dom until 1976.
It won the Hugo...
Awards Won:
Niekas
Awards Won:
Amra
Awards Won:
Energumen
Awards Won:
Algol
Algol:The Magazine About Science Fiction was published from 1963-1984 by Andrew Porter. The name was changed to Starship late in its run. It won a Hugo Award for Best Fanzine in 1974, in a tie with Richard E. Geis' Science Fiction Review; and...
Awards Won:
The Alien Critic
Awards Won:
Lan's Lantern
Awards Won:
Texas SF Inquirer
Awards Won:
The Mad 3 Party
Awards Won:
Emerald City
Awards Won:
Plotka
Awards Won:
File 770
File 770 is a science fiction fanzine published by Mike Glyer and named for the party in Room 770 at the 1951 Worldcon science fiction convention which reportedly upstaged the convention. It has won the Hugo Award for Best Fanzine six times, in 1984...
Locus
Locus, subtitled "The Magazine Of The Science Fiction & Fantasy Field," is published monthly in Oakland, CA. It reports on the science fiction and fantasy writing industry, including comprehensive listings of new books published in the field. It is...