Though WSFA hasn’t yet posted it on their own web site, they did send me a press release to let me know that Tanith Lee’s story “Burn Her,” which appeared in her collection Dancing Through the Fire, is a finalist for the WSFA Small Press Award. Full press release below:
Finalists for the 2016 Washington Science Fiction Association (WSFA) Small Press Award for Short Fiction were announced August 9, 2016.
- “The Art of Deception”, Stephanie Burgis (Insert Title Here)
- “Headspace”, Beth Cato (Cats in Space)
- “Leashing the Muse”, Larry Hodges (Space and Time 5/15)
- “Cat Pictures Please”, Naomi Kritzer (Clarkesworld 1/15)
- “Burn Her”, Tanith Lee (Dancing Through the Fire)
- “The Haunting of Apollo A7LB”, Hannu Rajaniemi (Hannu Rajaniemi: Collected Fiction)
- “The Empress in Her Glory”, Robert Reed (Clarkesworld 4/15)
- “Today I Am Paul”, Martin L. Shoemaker (Clarkesworld 8/15)
- “Leftovers”, Leona Wisoker (Cats in Space)
The award, recognizing the “best original short fiction” published by small presses in the previous year, will be presented at Capclave in Gaithersburg MD at the Hilton Washington DC North/Gaithersburg on October 7-9, 2016. The winner will be chosen by members of WSFA. For more information, see the WSFA Small Press Award site.
With all the hoopla surrounding Hillary Clinton’s historic nomination for the Presidency of the United States, it’s important to remember that her “first” comes with a caveat: she’s the first female nominee for President from one of the two major parties. But long before she broke that glass ceiling, Victoria Claflin Woodhull broke the gender barrier. In 1872—75 years before Hillary Clinton was born—Victoria Woodhull won the nomination of the Equal Rights Party (who also nominated Frederick Douglass for Vice President). She came to national prominence through a series of lectures and writings on the United States government: what it was and what she believed it ought to be. She collected much of that thinking into the volume The Origins, Tendencies and Principles of Government.
In this newest year of the woman, Gray Rabbit Publications is proud to be publishing two volumes of Victoria Woodhull’s ideas.

