Hugo Award for Best Non-Fiction Book: Winning work Filter Award-Winning Work topics

Share This

Hugo Award for Best Non-Fiction Book

The Hugo Awards are given annually by members of the World Science Fiction Convention for the best science fiction or fantasy works. The awards are named after Hugo Gernsback, the founder of the pioneering science fiction magazine Amazing Stories, and given in various categories. The winners of the...
Learn more about Hugo Award for Best Non-Fiction Book »
Add More Topics Save this view to a base, or just for yourself.

20 Award-Winning Work topics matching:

Filter this Collection
+

x

Cosmos

Cosmos (1980), published by Random House, is a book by Carl Sagan based on his TV series Cosmos: A Personal Voyage. It is similarly structured to the TV series and contains most of the information from the series (though the book often explores the...

Danse Macabre

Danse Macabre (1981) is a non-fiction book by Stephen King, about horror fiction in print, radio, film and comics, and the genre's influence on United States popular culture. Danse Macabre examines the various influences on King's own writing, and...

Science Made Stupid

Science Made Stupid: How to Discomprehend the World Around Us is a book written and illustrated by Tom Weller in 1985. The winner of the 1986 Hugo Award for Best Non-Fiction Book, it is a parody of a junior high or high school-level science textbook...

The Motion of Light in Water

The Motion of Light in Water: Sex and Science Fiction Writing in the East Village is an autobiography by science fiction author Samuel R. Delany in which he recounts his experiences as growing up a gay African American, as well as some of his time...

The Encyclopedia of Science Fiction

The Encyclopedia of Science Fiction is a reference work on science fiction. The first edition, edited by Peter Nicholls with John Clute and Brian Stableford appeared in 1979, published by Granada. It was retitled The Science Fiction Encyclopedia in...

Time and Chance: an Autobiography

Time and Chance: an Autobiography is the autobiography of science fiction and fantasy writer L. Sprague de Camp, first published by Donald M. Grant, Publisher, Inc.. It won the 1997 Hugo Award for Best Non-Fiction Book. The book covers the writer's...

The Encyclopedia of Fantasy

The Encyclopedia of Fantasy is a 1997 reference work on fantasy, edited by John Clute and John Grant. Other contributors include Mike Ashley, Neil Gaiman, Diana Wynne Jones, David Langford, Sam J. Lundwall, Michael Scott Rohan, Brian Stableford and...
Edit Collection Schema
All topics in this collection are typed as Award-Winning Work
Use Data from this Collection
Choose a format:

Images and articles are not included in export files, which are limited to 1000 items. Complete data dumps are also available here.

Flag this Collection
Why do you want to flag this collection?