The awards are named for Sir
Julius Vogel, a prominent New Zealand journalist and politician, who was
Premier of New Zealand twice during the 1870s. He also, in 1889, wrote what is widely regarded as New Zealand's first science fiction novel, Anno Domini 2000, or, Woman's Destiny.[1] The book, written and published in Great Britain after Vogel had moved from New Zealand, pictured a New Zealand in the year 2000 where most positions of authority were held by women—at the time of writing, a radical proposition. In 2000, New Zealand's Head of State, Governor General, Prime Minister, Chief Justice and Attorney General were all women, as was the CEO of one of the country's largest companies,
Telecom.
History
National awards have been presented annually since 1989, but were initially simply known as the New Zealand Science Fiction Fan Awards, and were originally aimed primarily at fandom rather than at professional science fiction. In these early years the awards were organised on an ad-hoc basis by the organising committees of the national conventions, though with the support of the former national fan organisation, the
National Association for Science Fiction which nominally ran the awards from 1993. In the early 1990s the awards were briefly known as the Edmund Bayne Awards, after a well-known Wellington fan who had been killed in a road accident, but this name was never formalised.
In 2002 the awards were revamped and reorganised, and since that time have been aimed more at the professional science fiction and fantasy community. The current name also dates to 2002. These changes accompanied a change in the organisation of the awards, which are now formally run by national organisation
SFFANZ (the Science Fiction and Fantasy Association of New Zealand).
Categories change to some extent on an annual basis, but generally include professional awards for best novel, short story, dramatic presentation, and services to science fiction, as well as equivalent fan awards. Due to the size of New Zealand's science fiction, fantasy, and horror fiction communities, the awards cover all three of these frequently intertwined genres and attempt to treat each equally.
New Zealand science fiction fan award winners 1989-2001
Best Young Adult Novel: Summer Of Dreaming by
Lyn McConchie
Best Novella/Novelette: "A Tale Of The Interferers - Hunger For Forbidden Flesh" by
Paul Haines
Best Short Story: High Tide At Hot Water Beach by
Paul Haines
Best Collected Work: "A Foreign Country - New Zealand Speculative Fiction" by
Anna Caro and
Juliet Buchanan (editors)
Best Artwork: Cover for Tymon's Flight by
Frank Victoria
Best Dramatic Presentation (tie): "
This Is Not My Life" - Pilot Episode (Executive Producers: Gavin Strawhan, Rachel Lang,
Steven O'Meagher, Tim White. Producer: Tim Sanders. Directors:
Robert Sarkies,
Peter Salmon. Associate Producer: Polly Fryer) and "Kaitangata Twitch" - Pilot Episode by
Yvonne Mackay
Best Production/Publication: "White Cloud Worlds Anthology" by Paul Tobin (editor)