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Hugo History
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Join us as we discuss the eighth Hugo Award winner: Robert A. Heinlein's Stranger in a Strange Land. Host: Christine D. Baker, a historian who lives in Vancouver, BC. You can find her at @klaxoncomms.com on Bluesky or follow what she's reading at her website: https://klaxoncomms.com/reading/ This month's guest is Elias Eells of Bar Cart Bookshelf, where he reviews books and makes cocktails to go with them! You can buy his book, Cocktails and Consoles, whereever books are found. He also has an amazing sounding short story, "The Peacock Wizard and the Cave of the Busty Snake Ladies," in the forthcoming collection Shatter the Sun: Queer Tales of Untold Adventure (edited by dave ring). You can follow him on Bluesky at @eliaseells.bsky.social. From about 13:11 to about 45:40, Christine is recapping the book, which has A LOT of spoilers. The rest of the episode isn't spoiler free, but that section goes through the plot in detail. Hugo Award nominations here. Did you know that anyone can vote for the Hugos? Intro music by Breakz Studios! Come find us on patreon for more info: https://www.patreon.com/cw/hugohistory/posts (Sign up for the free tier and you'll still get extra details, links to references, and images of primary sources!) Some things we mention, more info about some of these in the monthly free email from Patreon: -A.K. Larkwood, The Unspoken Name -Jen Lyons -Tamsyn Muir -Dune -Shirley Jackson, The Haunting of Hill House -Tor Essentials Line -The Hobbit -Psychopomp -Neon Hemlock -Ancillary Review of Books -Nerds of a Feather -John Scalzi -Ursula K LeGuin -Terry Brooks -Prairie Oyster -L Ron Hubbard, Dianetics -John Campbell, editor of Astounding Science Fiction -Robert Jackson Bennett, Shadow of the Leviathan series -Shatter the Sun: Queer Tales of Untold Adventure
Join us as we discuss the seventh Hugo Award winner: Robert A. Miller's Canticle for Leibowitz. Host: Christine D. Baker, a historian who lives in Vancouver, BC. You can find her at @klaxoncomms.com on Bluesky or follow what she's reading at her website: https://klaxoncomms.com/reading/ This month's guest is Josh Nudell, historian and speculative fiction fan. You can find Josh on Bluesky @jpnudell.bsky.social and more of his writing on his website. From about 6:19 to about 23:53, Christine is recapping the book, which has A LOT of spoilers. The rest of the episode isn't spoiler free, but that section goes through the plot in detail. New intro music by Breakz Studios! Come find us on patreon for more info: https://www.patreon.com/cw/hugohistory/posts (Sign up for the free tier and you'll still get extra details, links to references, and images of primary sources!) Some things we mention, more info about some of these in the monthly free email from Patreon: The Great Gatsby Isaac Asimov, Foundation Series Farenheit 451 Oral Traditions The Wandering Jew Henry IV, Holy Roman Emperor, Antipopes. "bicephalous old tomato woman" Benedictines Battle of Monte Cassino Preservation of Knowledge, especially in England and Ireland Everyone who has lived has probably thought of themselves as the most modern: Ashurbanipal II and Cleopatra "Long history" Hav by Jan Morris — intro by Usula K. LeGuin Monastic movements How the Catholic Church canonizes saints Dune Sequel to Canticle: Saint Leibowitz and the Wild Horse Woman Cyclical model of history https://reactormag.com/hugo-nominees-1961/
Join us as we discuss the sixth Hugo Award winner: Robert A. Heinlein's Starship Troopers! Host: Christine D. Baker, a historian who lives in Vancouver, BC. You can find her at @klaxoncomms.com on Bluesky or follow what she's reading at her website: https://klaxoncomms.com/reading/ This month's guest is journalist and long-time Doctor Who podcaster, Warren Frey, @freyburg.bsky.social, from Radio Free Skaro. From about 4:18 to about 27:30, Christine is recapping the book, which has A LOT of spoilers. The rest of the episode isn't spoiler free, but that section goes through the plot in detail. Some things mentioned in the episode: Leo Laporte MacBreak 1960 Hugo nominees Proceedings for the Institute for Twenty-First Century Studies Theodore Cogswell Anthony Boucher, founder of SFF Poul Anderson Speculative Whiteness: Science Fiction and the Alt-Right by Jordan S. Carroll John Scalzi's Old Man's War Paul Verhoeven Joe Haldeman The Forever War Jo Walton on the 1960 Hugos: https://reactormag.com/hugo-nominees-1960/ New intro music by Breakz Studios! Come find us on patreon for more info: https://www.patreon.com/cw/hugohistory/posts (Sign up for the free tier and you'll still get extra details, links to references, and images of primary sources!)
Join us as we discuss the Hugo Award winner for 1959: James Blish's A Case of Conscience. You can find the book on the Internet Archive here. Host: Christine D. Baker, a historian who lives in Vancouver, BC. You can find her at @klaxoncomms.com on Bluesky or follow what she's reading at her website: https://klaxoncomms.com/reading/ This month's guest is Alana Vincent, a scholar who studies the portrayals of religion in literature, especially in Science Fiction and Fantasy. They are a series editor for Bloomsbury Studies in Popular Fiction and Religious Dynamics. The most recent book in the series, Sang-Keun Yoo's Speculative Orientialsm: Asian Religions in New Wave Science Fiction, came out in September 2025. You can find Alana on Bluesky at @alana-m-vincent.net. From about 5:38-27:54, Christine is recapping the book, which has A LOT of spoilers. The rest of the episode isn't spoiler free, but that section goes through the plot in detail. If you'd like to support the podcast on patreon: https://www.patreon.com/cw/HugoHistory Or, you can buy me a coffee! Some things mentioned in the episode: A biography of James Blish: Imprisoned in a tesseract: the life and work of James Blish by David Ketterer. Jo Walton's rundown of the 1959 Hugo Awards.
Join us as we discuss the Hugo Award winner for 1958: Fritz Lieber's The Big Time: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Big_Time_(novel) You can find the whole book at The Internet Archive. Host: Christine D. Baker, a historian who lives in Vancouver, BC. You can find her at @klaxoncomms.com on Bluesky or follow what she's reading at her website: https://klaxoncomms.com/reading/ This month's guest is Nora Spurling of Leaf It To Us, where they take plants out of the background and talk about that fascinating group that's so essential to us as humans. In addition, Nora is also fantastic at literary analysis and a big speculative fiction fan! From about 2:53-18:41, Christine is recapping the book, which has A LOT of spoilers. The rest of the episode isn't spoiler free, but that section goes through the plot in detail. Some things mentioned in the episode: Nora mentioned Lieber's short stories related to The Big Time: The Mind Spider and Other Stories Robert Graves, poet and translator of ancient Greek Keftians, which Christine calls a fairly niche historical reference Robert Heinlein John W. Campbell Jungian ideas of gender, mentioned by Nora Good Girls, Good Food, Good Fun: The Story of USO Hostesses during World War II by Meghan K. Winchell (2015) I think that I (Christine) was wrong, they probably did distribute condoms during WWII: https://hekint.org/2017/01/22/put-a-helmet-on-your-privates-because-theyre-going-to-see-some-action-the-history-of-condoms-in-the-military/ Hugo Girl Podcast on The Big Time Judith Merril I did eventually go back and find Dave. Transcript.
Join us as we discuss the third Hugo Award winner: Robert A Heinlein's Double Star, which won in 1956. Host: Christine D. Baker, a historian who lives in Vancouver, BC. You can find her at @klaxoncomms.com on Bluesky or follow what she's reading at her website: https://klaxoncomms.com/reading/ Hugo History has a patreon! This month's guest is David Blaeser, a Vancouver-based fiber artist who is reading his way through all the Hugo and Nebula winners. You can find him on instagram. From about 3:30 to 20:55, Christine is recapping the book, which has A LOT of spoilers. The rest of the episode isn't spoiler free, but that section goes through the plot in detail. Some things mentioned in the episode: Power Trip Shrinks: The Untold Story of Psychiatry by Jeffrey Lieberman and Ogi Ogas Jo Walton's review of the 1956 Hugos Transcripts are coming!
Join us as we discuss the second Hugo Award winner: Frank Riley and Mark Clifton's They'd Rather Be Right, which is often called 'the worst book to ever win the Hugo'!! Host: Christine D. Baker, a historian who lives in Vancouver, BC. You can find her at @klaxoncomms.com on Bluesky or follow what she's reading at her website: https://klaxoncomms.com/reading/ This month's guest is Rob Tomshany, @robtomshany.bsky.social, who has near encyclopedic knowledge of 50s and 60s sci fi and fantasy. From about 2:05 to 9:37, Christine is recapping the book, which has A LOT of spoilers. The rest of the episode isn't spoiler free, but that section goes through the plot in detail. Some things mentioned in the episode: Jo Walton's review of 1955 Hugo winners: https://reactormag.com/hugo-nominees-1955 1960s New Wave — Dangerous Vision anthologies edited by Harlan Ellison The Hidden Persuaders by Vance Packard The Space Merchants by Frederik Pohl Stories are Weapons by Annalee Newitz Psychological Warfare by Paul Linebarger/Cordwainer Smith Turing test Arthur C Clark, 2001: A Space Odyssey Slan by A.E. Van Vogt Judith Merril — intro to story collection of Mike Clifton John Campbell — editor of Astounding J.B. Rhine — research about telepathy Galaxy Magazine FNSF (Fantasy & Science Fiction Magazine) Robert Heinlein The Moon is a Harsh Mistress Stranger in a Strange Land Isaac Asimov L Ron Hubbard Dianetics To the Stars Scientology Mark Clifton's short stories What Have I Done? 8 Keys to Eden When They Came from Space What Now Little Man Hang Head Vandal Ayn Rand, Atlas Shrugged The Science Fiction of Mark Clifton, co edited by Martin H. Greenbergand Barry N. Malzberg What Have I Done: The Stories of Mark Clifton Born Sexy Yesterday (Not Born Again Sexy)
Join us as we discuss the first ever book to win a Hugo Award: Alfred Bester's The Demolished Man: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Demolished_Man Host: Christine D. Baker, a historian who lives in Vancouver, BC. You can find her at @klaxoncomms.com on Bluesky or follow what she's reading at her website: https://klaxoncomms.com/reading/ This month's guest is Miles Reid-Lobatto of Casual Trek. You can find Miles on Bluesky at @milesreidlobatto.bsky.social and his podcast at @casualtrek. From about 5:45-19:00, Christine is recapping the book, which has A LOT of spoilers. The rest of the episode isn't spoiler free, but that section goes through the plot in detail. Some things mentioned in the episode: Jo Walton's review of 1953 Hugo winners: https://reactormag.com/hugo-nominees-1953/ The Star is My Destination by Alfred Bester City by Clifford Simak More than Human by Theodore Sturgeon Kinsey Scale and the DSM











