Home 5 Articles and Reports 5 Chinese SF writer wins Arthur C Clarke Award

Chinese SF writer wins Arthur C Clarke Award

by | Dec 4, 2018 | Articles and Reports, News

The Chinese science fiction writer Liu Cixin has won the Arthur C Clarke Award for Imagination in Service to Society, awarded by the Arthur C Clarke Foundation.  His most famous work is the Three Body trilogy, published in the UK by Head of Zeus whose publisher Nic Cheetham said: “Three-Body was one of the great reading experiences of my life.  It is a milestone in the global development of the SF genre – and as this award confirms, a milestone in the history of SF.”

The trilogy has been an unprecedented critical and commercial success, both in its homeland, and internationally. Sales in China are well in excess of a million copies — and this is evenly matched by international sales. Head of Zeus has sold 400,000 copies into UK & Commonwealth alone, with further rights sales having now been made in over 20 territories.  Cixin has been awarded two Nebula Awards, as well as the Hugo and Locus Awards for Best Novel for the trilogy.

Sheldon Brown, director of the Arthur C. Clarke Center for Human Imagination, University of California, San Diego, said “Human society faces new challenges in the 21st century, and science fiction helps to extend human knowledge. The Three-Body trilogy helps us to see our problems”.

The Arthur C. Clarke Foundation was established in 1983 in Washington, D.C. It was created to recognize and promote the extraordinary contributions of Arthur C. Clarke to the world, and to promote the use of space and telecommunications technology for the benefit of humankind.

The awards have been presented since 2012.  Previous winners have included Kim Stanley Robinson, winner of the Hugo, Nebula and Locus awards, Ursula Le Guin, author of the Earthsea series; and Margaret Attwood, whose sequel to her famous Handmaid’s Tale has just been announced.

Related Posts

Prix Voltaire 2025 Awarded to Belarusian Publishers

Prix Voltaire 2025 Awarded to Belarusian Publishers

Belarusian publishers Nadia Kandrusevich of Koska and Dmitri Strotsev of Hochroth Minsk were jointly awarded the 2025 International Publishers Association’s Prix Voltaire, the freedom to publish prize, at the award ceremony at the World Expression Forum in...

Book Ban Expands in Russia

Book Ban Expands in Russia

The Russian book distributor BMM has ordered bookshops to “return or destroy” works by the Pulitzer Prize-winner Jeffery Eugenides and the British bestseller Bridget Collins, among others, the BBC reports.  It is the latest case of censorship targeting the country's...

£75K Prize for 3 Pages

£75K Prize for 3 Pages

New book prize to award aspiring writer £75,000 for first three pages of novel A new competition is offering £75,000 to an aspiring writer based on just three pages of their novel.   Actor Emma Roberts, Bridgerton author Julia Quinn and Booker-winning Life of Pi...

Previous Next
Close
Test Caption
Test Description goes like this