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Read N.K. Jemisin’s Historic Hugo Speech

Read N.K. Jemisin’s Historic Hugo Speech

At WorldCon 76 in San Jose, N.K. Jemisin made history, winning her third consecutive Hugo Award for The Stone Sky, the third book in The Broken Earth trilogy. She is the first person to win three Best Novel Hugo awards in a row, and the first to win top honors for every book in a series. (If you haven’t jumped in to this game-changing epic fantasy yet, you can preorder the boxed set, due out in October).

Below, we present the text of Jemisin’s historic speech, provided to us via her publisher, Orbit Books. 

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I get a lot of questions about where the themes of the Broken Earth trilogy come from. I think it’s pretty obvious that I’m drawing on the human history of structural oppression, as well as my feelings about this moment in American history. What may be less obvious, though, is how much of the story derives from my feelings about science fiction and fantasy. Then again, SFF is a microcosm of the wider world, in no way rarefied from the world’s pettiness or prejudice.

So as I stand here before you, beneath these lights, I want you to remember that 2018 is also a good year. This is a year in which records have been set. A year in which even the most privilege-blindered of us has been forced to acknowledge that the world is broken and needs fixing—and that’s a good thing! Acknowledging the problem is the first step toward fixing it. I look to science fiction and fantasy as the aspirational drive of the Zeitgeist: we creators are the engineers of possibility. And as this genre finally, however grudgingly, acknowledges that the dreams of the marginalized matter and that all of us have a future, so will go the world. (Soon, I hope.)

And yes, there will be naysayers. I know that I am here on this stage, accepting this award, for pretty much the same reason as every previous Best Novel winner: because I worked my ass off. I have poured my pain onto paper when I could not afford therapy. I have studied works of literature that range widely and dig deeply, to learn what I could and refine my voice. I have written a Million Words of Crap and probably a Million More of Meh.

The Killing Moon (Dreamblood Series #1)

N. K. Jemisin

5

Paperback

$19.99

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How Long 'til Black Future Month?

N. K. Jemisin

Hardcover

$30.00

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How many of y’all saw Black Panther? Probably my favorite part of it is actually Kendrick Lamar’s theme song, “All the Stars.” The chorus of it is “This may be the night that my dreams might let me know: all the stars are closer.” Let 2018 be the year that the stars came closer for all of us. The stars are ours. Thank you.

N.K. Jemisin’s next book is the short story collection How Long ‘Til Black Future Month? out November 27, 2018 from Orbit Books. Preorder now.