I jsut want to note this is not directed a Variol, I just have some strong feeligns about this topic -
when that is the most popular subgenre of fantasy by a considerable margin.
Again, I don't popularity has anything to do with a judgement of perceived quality. I know a lot of people who love and buy Fords as well - they know it's not the best car.
Dan Brown is outselling everyone, perhaps we should give him the Pulitzer, or the Booker.
If we went by these parameters we would give Rowling the award every year hands down. No one is more popular, and it's not even close.
I should point out, by the way, that epic fantasy is ineligible to win most SFF genre awards; the WFA is about the only major award that an epic fantasy could win
That is an
absolute fallacy - The Locus Awards have been won by Epic Fantasy (All of Martin's Book has won)
Lois McMaster Bujold just won the Nebula and the Hugo for her various Chalion work.
Many Epic Fantasy authors don't win the Hugo because they aren't members - that is their own damn fault for not wishing to be a participate. I was at Worldon, a huge spectacle of fans, publishers, and authors, a first rate production. The mainstream authors would rather support some video-game convention or other media based convention that there lame books are associated with. It goes along with your statement here:
But perhaps the principal reason why epic fantasy books so rarely win the WFA is that very few epic fantasy writers attend WFC
I've spoken to several authors wh a re not criticaly well received that talk about how insular the genre is and how stuck up some segments of the industry are and thus avoid certain cons (WorldCon etc). They call this the
'Locus Crowd" in some cases. You know what? Damn them. 1000's of people from all over the world went to Worldcon, which IMHO is the genre's best show annually, then they come on messagboards or blogs and whine about the so called
"literati", while they have been getting fat off of sub-par work for decades.
They want respect? Write a book we haven't read dozens of times over. Write a book not on the merits of past authors, Write a book that isn't completely accessbile by 6 year olds, and you may get some respect from adults.
and the voice of the average reader is not heard in that land.
I just don't view this as a negative, if we did this every years ballot would be filled with mediocrity. Again Rowling would win, hands down, there is no other author that is even close in popularity the numbers do not lie. Who woufl be on the ballot? Terry Brooks, Robert Jordan, Terry Goodkind, RA Salvatore and Rowling? Maybe Paoulini? I don't want to here from the popular crowd personally - sales number indicate a taste that is more then questionable. That said, if my preferences were different perhaps I would have an issue with it. It is subjective. At this point I look at these nominess and I see Clarke, Mieville, Wolfe and it's hard to argue with.
Epic Fantasy doesn't win simply because the sub-genre is full of absolute clones of each other - what book should have won that didn't in epic fantasy recently? Perhaps if they weren't so reliant a 10 books tombs someone may give them consideration. Why should book 6 of
" the epic adventures of the boy with a magic talisman", be considered to be able to stand alone with other books? It's not fair in that standpoint, as most books based in series are absolutely reliant upon prior books or otherwise make no sense.
You know who votes for the Hugo? Fans who care enough to support the convention, which I would assocaite with die-hard fans. I voted for Clarke to win the Hugo. Why? Because I'm stuck up ? Because I have a hidden agenda? To stick it to another author perhaps? No, IMHO it was the best book released last year.
You may have a low enough opinion of the average reader to consider this a good thing.
I don't have a low opinion of anyone. I do think if we took the top 20 sellers in fantasy last year you would see mediocrity make up the majority of the list. I don't have a low opinion, simply a difference of opinion. I simply don't agree that the authors who are consisitently fan favorites (by sales) are nearly the best in the genre. In fact I consider most of them the gutter of the genre. Again that is subjective, but besides Rowling, Brooks and Jordan are probably the (when I say probably I mean I already have researxhed this, and please nobody bring up the Donaldson number he has sold 6-8 million coppies of
Covenant books, I am aware of the ridiculous
"outsold Tolkien" advertisement that some people swear by, that is of course absurd, as I have had to point out a half dozen times this year) are the 2 biggest fantasy sellers in recent times - they are also two of the worst authors I have ever read.
At any rate, Im not too keen on getting int oa debate about epic fantasy.

it's a tired debate that has been goign for years constantly o never major and minor genre board.
what we maybe should do is focus on a particualr book you think should have won in recent years and didn't - that may be interesting
