Sci Fiction
Sci Fiction was a Hugo Award winning digital publication that ran from 2000 to 2005, during which time it was the leading online science fiction magazine. Published by Syfy and edited by Ellen Datlow, fiction from the magazine won multiple awards including the very first Nebula Award presented to an online-published story. Sci Fiction helped raise the overall status of online-published fiction and has been said to have achieved for online magazines what Astounding Magazine did six decades earlier for print SF magazines.
History
Sci Fiction was launched in May 2000 as a "prestige object" of the Sci-Fi Channel's website after producer Craig Engler approached Ellen Datlow about starting the magazine. Datlow was already a well-known editor of online magazines, having previously edited the online incarnations of OMNI and Event Horizon.While Sci Fiction was called a magazine, it didn't exist under a unique url but instead was part of the larger SciFi.com website, with Datlow publishing a new story and a classic reprint each week. The magazine also had its own bulletin board and archives. The magazine paid twenty cents a word for fiction, which was three times the rate offered by the leading science fiction and fantasy print magazines.
The first story Datlow published was Freeing the Angels by Pat Cadigan and Chris Fowler on May 19, 2000, an updated cyberpunk-style story.
In late 2005 the Sci-Fi Channel announced that it would be shutting down the magazine, a decision evidently made because the magazine was not a major revenue generator for the channel. Craig Engler of the Sci-Fi Channel also noted that the magazine attracted relatively few visitors and that "keeping track of the rights to its stories was too much trouble." The decision to shut down the magazine was heavily criticized, with Gardner Dozois noting the magazine was "killed by shortsighted corporate bean counters at The Sci Fi Channel." It is believed that part of the reason why Sci Fiction was shut down is because at that time most people used dial-up to reach the internet, meaning longer online fiction was "difficult and slow to access." In addition, Sci-Fi Channel had buried the magazine within their larger website, making it hard to find.
Sci-Fi announced their intention to remove the Sci Fiction archived content as of June 2007, although some of it was still available over a year later. It has since been removed completely.
Legacy
Many of the stories that were originally published on Sci Fiction are now unable to be accessed and no longer in print, which Mike Ashley says leads people to overlook the magazine's achievements. But Ashley says that despite this, because of Sci Fiction "the status of online fiction set a new benchmark."The Encyclopedia of Science Fiction has stated that Sci Fiction "achieved for Online Magazines what John W Campbell Jr's Astounding had achieved for Pulp sf sixty years before." And according to Gardner Dozois, the magazine was at the time "the most important and universally recognized place on the Internet to reliably find SF, fantasy and horror of high professional quality."
Ellen Datlow later described her work on the magazine by saying, "If there was still any doubt that online venues could produce outstanding fiction, Sci Fiction demolished them for good."
Awards
During the six years of the magazine's existence, stories published in Sci Fiction won four Nebula Awards, a Theodore Sturgeon Award, a World Fantasy Award, a Million Writers Award, and an International Horror Guild Award. Among these was Linda Nagata's "Goddesses" which won the Nebula Award for Best Novella for 2000. This was the first time that a piece of fiction originally published on a website won a Nebula. Ironically, a story published a few weeks earlier than Nagata's novella, "The Cure for Everything" by Severna Park, won the Nebula Award for Best Short Story in 2002. This story would have been the first online-published story to win a Nebula except that a quirk in the award rules meant it didn't make the award's final ballot until the following year.In 2002 Ellen Datlow won her first Hugo Award for Best Editor, the first time the award was given to an editor of an online magazine. In 2003 stories from the webzine won three awards, the Nebula Awards for Best Short Story and Best Novelette, and the Theodore Sturgeon Award for Lucius Shepard's novella "Over Yonder".
A short story Datlow published a few months before Sci Fiction was shut down, "There's a Hole in the City" by Richard Bowes, won the 2006 storySouth Million Writers Award and the International Horror Guild Award for Best Short Form. The story was also a finalist for the 2006 Nebula Award for Best Short Story and the Gaylactic Spectrum Award for Best Short Fiction.
In 2005, Datlow won her second Hugo Award for Best Editor and the website itself won a Hugo for Best Website. She also won her first Locus Award for Best Editor in 2005.
Classic reprints in ''Sci Fiction''
Among the classic stories reprinted in Sci Fiction were:- The Ship Who Sang by Anne McCaffrey
- When It Changed by Joanna Russ
- I Have No Mouth, and I Must Scream by Harlan Ellison
- The Day the Martians Came by Frederik Pohl
- Love Is the Plan the Plan Is Death by James Tiptree, Jr.
- The Screwfly Solution by James Tiptree, Jr.
- The Sliced-Crosswise Only-On-Tuesday World by Philip José Farmer
- When I Was Miss Dow by Sonya Dorman
- The Dandelion Girl by Robert F. Young
- Aye, and Gomorrah by Samuel R. Delany
- Star Light, Star Bright by Alfred Bester
- The Great Wall of Mexico by John Sladek.
List of new stories published in ''Sci Fiction''
Original stories published in the year 2000
| Title | Author | Uploaded | URL |
| Freeing the Angels | Pat Cadigan and Chris Fowler | May 19, 2000 | |
| The War of the Worlds | James P. Blaylock | May 24, 2000 | |
| Malthusian's Zombie | Jeffrey Ford | May 31, 2000 | |
| Chimera | Kristine Kathryn Rusch | June 7, 2000 | |
| Castle in the Desert: Anno Dracula 1977 | Kim Newman | June 14, 2000 | |
| The Cure for Everything | Severna Park | June 22, 2000 | |
| Dune: Nighttime Shadows on Open Sand | Brian Herbert and Kevin J. Anderson | June 28, 2000 | |
| Goddesses | Linda Nagata | July 5, 2000 | |
| Winter Quarters | Howard Waldrop | August 2, 2000 | |
| Partial Eclipse | Graham Joyce | August 9, 2000 | |
| Ciné Rimettato | A. R. Morlan | August 16, 2000 | |
| Tir-na-nOg | Dave Hutchinson | August 23, 2000 | |
| The Real World | Steven Utley | August 30, 2000 | |
| From the Files of the Time Rangers | Richard Bowes | September 6, 2000 | |
| Birdy Girl | Robert Reed | September 20, 2000 | |
| Wetlands Preserve | Nancy Kress | September 27, 2000 | |
| The Origin of Truth | Tim Lebbon | October 4, 2000 | |
| Nevada | A. M. Dellamonica | October 11, 2000 | |
| The Other Side | James P. Blaylock | October 18, 2000 | |
| The Far Oasis | Jeffrey Ford | October 25, 2000 | |
| The Pottawatomie Giant | Andy Duncan | November 1, 2000 | |
| The Flyers of Gy: An Interplanary Tale | Ursula K. Le Guin | November 8, 2000 | |
| Tomorrow Town | Kim Newman | November 15, 2000 | |
| The Despoblado | Steven Utley | November 22, 2000 | |
| A Cold Dish | Lisa Tuttle | November 29, 2000 | |
| Chip Crockett's Christmas Carol | Elizabeth Hand | December 6, 2000 |
External resources
- at The Locus Index to Science Fiction Awards
Category:Defunct science fiction magazines published in the United States
Category:Magazines established in 2000
Category:Magazines disestablished in 2005
Category:Science fiction webzines
Category:Hugo Award–winning works