Get a free story when you subscribe

Author, Editor, Media Tie-In Writer

2025 Awards Eligibility Post

It has begun. The Hugo Award nominations are open! I would be pleased if you would consider my works for nomination. (All about eligibility.) You must be a member of Worldcon (2024 or 2025) to nominate eligible works.

In the editing category, I am eligible for Best Editor, Short Form. I edited 3 anthologies (two co-edited with John Helfers) last year—99 Fleeting Fantasies, Shadowrun: Magic, Machines, & Mayhem, and Shadowrun: Through the Decades. Of all the award nominations, this is the one I am the most interested in and believe I’ve done excellent work.

In the writing category, I am eligible for Best Short Story for my short stories: “Eye of the Beholder” (co-written with Raven Oak), “Hella AFK,” “A Tale for Munchausen’s Merriment,” and “Dueling Minstrels” (co-written with Marie Bilodeau). I am proud of these short stories.

I am also eligible for the Lodestar Award for Best Young Adult Book (not a Hugo) for my novel, Shadowrun: The Mosaic Run. This was one heck of a fun YA heist novel.

Jennifer Brozek's 2025 award eligibility works.

If you would like copies or samples of any of these, please contact me through my webform.

 

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Meet Jennifer Brozek

Jennifer Brozek is a multi-talented, award-winning author, editor, and media tie-in writer. She is the author of Never Let Me Sleep and The Last Days of Salton Academy, both of which were nominated for the Bram Stoker Award. Her YA tie-in novels, BattleTech: The Nellus Academy Incident and Shadowrun: Auditions, have both won Scribe Awards. Her editing work has earned her nominations for the British Fantasy Award, the Bram Stoker Award, and the Hugo Award. She won the Australian Shadows Award for the Grants Pass anthology, co-edited with Amanda Pillar. Jennifer’s short form work has appeared in Apex Publications, Uncanny Magazine, Daily Science Fiction, and in anthologies set in the worlds of Valdemar, Shadowrun, V-Wars, Masters of Orion, Well World, and Predator.

Jennifer has been a full-time freelance author and editor for over seventeen years, and she has never been happier. She keeps a tight schedule on her writing and editing projects and somehow manages to find time to teach writing classes and volunteer for several professional writing organizations such as SFWA, HWA, and IAMTW. She shares her husband, Jeff, with several cats and often uses him as a sounding board for her story ideas. Visit Jennifer’s worlds at jenniferbrozek.com or her social media accounts on LinkTree.

Browse the archives

You may also like...

It is all Shadowrun all the time right now. I’m deep into MAKEDA RED and that’s pretty much all I’m doing right now. So, here’s some links for you and a chance for you to win a set of Melissa Allen audiobooks. REVIEW: Here’s a great review of NEVER LET ME. I really appreciate reviews like this. REVIEW: Here’s a really good review of APOCALYPSE GIRL DREAMING. I love the fact that some of the stories stick with her. REVIEW: Here’s a great review of DECISION POINTS. The reviewer says that my story, “The Prince of Artemis V,” hit a home run. SALE: Apocalypse Ink Productions is having a sale of my Karen Wilson Chronicles books! If you were waiting to get any of the individual trade paperbacks, Now is the time to get them. After May 1st, they are gone for good. Karen Wilson Chronicles Trade Paperback Last Chance...

scroll-horizontal

I’ve not yet met C.A. Suleiman but I have met a lot of the contributors to THE LOST CITADEL, all of whom are worth reading. This is one reason why they decided to do a shared world anthology. One I can get behind. — “The city is called “Redoubt”… and so far as anyone knows, it is the last. Seven decades ago, there were cities upon cities; kingdoms and nations, the remains of ancient empire. Cultures at war, cultures at trade. Races with varying degrees of alliance and distrust. Humans, elves, dwarves, and others; magic and monsters, rare but real. Regions of desolation, certainly, but also regions of plenty; forests, farmlands, and fields. And so it was for millennia, through two dynamic ages the lorekeepers and scribes called Ascensions. Until the world ended. Most call it the Fall, but whatever term a given people choose to use, it marked the...

scroll-horizontal