Awards
And Recognition

Harlan Ellison earned numerous prestigious accolades throughout his career, including Hugo Awards, Nebula Awards, Bram Stoker Awards, and Edgar Allan Poe Awards. He also received multiple Writers Guild of America (WGA) Awards and an Emmy for his exceptional television scripts.

Awards

CAREER AND SPECIAL AWARDS 

2011: Eaton Award — for best critical book, to 2001; since 2008, for lifetime achievement, juried – lifetime achievement in science fiction — winner 

2011: Science Fiction Hall of Fame — selected by Science Fiction Museum and advisors – winner 

2006: SFWA Grand Master Award — chosen by SF & Fantasy Writers of America officers – winner 

2000: World Horror Grandmaster — for outstanding contributor to the horror genre; voted by World Horror Con members -winner 

1997: 1-CON Award — for contributions to SF/F/H, presented by annual convention I-CON (Julius Schwartz & HE) Gallun Award winner 

1996: Bram Stoker Awards — for Horror works, voted by Horror Writer’s Association professional membership – life achievement — winner 

1993: World Fantasy Awards — for Fantasy works; juried, with nominations from World Fantasy Con members – life achievement — winner 

1995: International Horror Guild Awards — for horror works, juried- Living Legend — winner 1986: Milford Award — for lifetime achievement in publishing or editing- winner 

1970: Forry Award — for lifetime achievement, presented by the Los Angeles Science Fantasy Society – winner 

 

MAJOR AWARDS 

Hugo Awards — for SF/F works, voted by members of annual World Science Fiction Convention (26 nominations; 8 wins) 

1994: Mefisto In Onyx (Omni Oct 1993; Mark V. Ziesing) — novella — nomination 

1990: Harlan Ellison’s Watching (Underwood-Miller) — nonfiction book — nomination 

1989: “The Function of Dream Sleep ” (Midnight Graffiti Jun 1988: Asimov’s mid-Dec 1988) — novelette — nomination 

1988: The Essential Ellison: A 35-Year Retrospective (Nemo Press) — other forms — nomination 

1988: “I, Robot: The Movie” (Asimov’s Nov,Dec,mid-Dec 1987) — other forms — nomination 1986: “Paladin of the Lost Hour ” (Universe 15; Twilight Zone Dec 1985) — novelette — winner 1986: An Edge in My Voice (Donning) — nonfiction book — nomination 

1985: Sleepless Nights in the Procrustean Bed (Borgo Press) — nonfiction book — nomination 1981:”All the Lies That Are My Life ” (F&SF Nov 1980; Underwood-Miller) — novella — nomination 

1979: “Count the Clock That Tells the Time ” (Omni Dec 1978) — short story — nomination 1978: “Jeffty Is Five ” (F&SF Jul 1977) — short story — winner 

1976: “Croatoan ” (F&SF May 1975) — short story — nomination 

1975: “Adrift Just Off the Islets of Langerhans: Latitude 38° 54′ N, Longitude 77° 00′ 13″ W” (F&SF Oct 1974) — novelette —winner 

1974: “The Deathbird ” (F&SF Mar 1973) — novelette — winner 

1973: “Basilisk ” (F&SF Aug 1972) — novelette — nomination 

1971: “The Region Between” (Galaxy Mar 1970) — novella — nomination 

1971:”Brillo” (by Ben Bova & HE) (Analog Aug 1970) — short story — nomination 

1970: “A Boy and His Dog” (The Beast that Shouted Love at the Heart of the World) — novella — nomination 

1969: “The Beast That Shouted Love at the Heart of the World ” (Galaxy Jun 1968) — short story — winner 

1968: “Pretty Maggie Moneyeyes ” (Knight May 1967) — novelette — nomination 

1968: I Have No Mouth, and I Must Scream ” If Mar 1967) — short story — winner 

1968: Star Trek: “The City on the Edge of Forever” — dramatic presentation — winner 

1968: Fan writer — nomination 

1967: “Delusions for a Dragon Slayer” (Knight Sep 1966) — short story — nomination 

1966: ‘Repent, Harlequin!’ said the Ticktockman” (Galaxy Dec 1965) — short fiction — winner 1956: Most promising new author — nomination 

Nebula Awards — for SF/F works, voted by SF & Fantasy Writers of America professional membership (17 nominations; 4 wins) 

2011: “How Interesting: A Tiny Man” (Realms of Fantasy Feb 2010) — short story — winner (tie) 2004: “Goodbye to All That ” (McSweeney’s Mammoth Treasury of Thrilling Tales) — short story — nomination 

1995: Mefisto In Onyx (Omni Oct 1993; Mark V. Ziesing) — novella — nomination 

1994: “The Man Who Rowed Christopher Columbus Ashore ” (Omni Jul 1992; World Fantasy Convention Program Book) —short story — nomination 

1986:”Paladin of the Lost Hour ” (Universe 15; Twilight Zone Dec 1985) — novelette — nomination 

1978: “Jeffty Is Five ” (F&SF Jul 1977) — short story — winner 

1977: “Harlan! Harlan Ellison Reads Harlan Ellison” (recording) — dramatic presentation — nomination 

1976: “Shatterday” (Gallery Sep 1975) — short story — nomination 

1976: A Boy and His Dog (by L. Q. Jones, screenplay ; based on the work by HE) — dramatic writing — nomination 

1974: “The Deathbird ” (F&SF Mar 1973) — novelette — nomination 

1973: “Basilisk ” (F&SF Aug 1972) — novelette — nomination 

1973: “On the Downhill Side ” (Universe 2) — short story — nomination 

1971: “The Region Between” (Galaxy Mar 1970) — novella — nomination 

1970: “A Boy and His Dog” (The Beast that Shouted Love at the Heart of the World) — novella — winner 

1970: “Shattered Like a Glass Goblin ” (Orbit 4) — short story — nomination 

1968: “Pretty Maggie Moneyeyes ” (Knight May 1967) — novelette — nomination 

1966: “Repent, Harlequin!’ said the Ticktockman” (Galaxy Dec 1965) — short story — winner

World Fantasy Awards — for Fantasy works; juried, with nominations from World Fantasy Con members (8 nominations; 2 wins) 

2002: The Essential Ellison: A 50-Year Retrospective: Revised and Expanded (HE; Terry Dowling with Richard Delay & Gil Lamont, eds.) (Morpheus International) — collection — nomination 

1994: Mefisto In Onyx (Omni Oct 1993; Mark V. Ziesing) — novella — nomination 

1990:Harlan Ellison’s Watching (Underwood-Miller) — collection — nomination 

1989: Angry Candy (Houghton Mifflin) — collection — winner (tie) 

1981: Shatterday (Houghton Mifflin) — anthology/collection — nomination 

1978: “Jeffty Is Five ” (F&SF Jul 1977) — short fiction — nomination 

1976: Deathbird Stories (Harper & Row) — collection — nomination

Bram Stoker Awards — for Horror works, voted by Horror Writer’s Association professional membership (10 nominations; 6 wins) 

2002: “From A to Z, In the Sarsaparilla Alphabet” (F&SF Feb 2001) — long fiction — nomination 2000: I Have No Mouth and I Must Scream (audio) (Dove) — other media — winner 

1996: “Chatting with Anubis ” (Lore #1; Harlan Ellison’s Dream Corridor) — short story — winner 1994: Mefisto In Onyx (Omni Oct 1993; Mark V. Ziesing) — novella — winner (tie) 

1990: Harlan Ellison’s Watching (Underwood-Miller) — nonfiction book — winner (tie) 

1989: “The Function of Dream Sleep ” (Midnight Graffiti Jun 1988) — novelette — nomination 1989: “She’s a Young Thing and Cannot Leave Her Mother” (Pulphouse: The Hardback Magazine: Issue One: Fall 1988) —short story — nomination 

1989: Angry Candy (Houghton Mifflin) — collection — nomination 

1988: The Essential Ellison: A 35-Year Retrospective (Nemo Press) — collection — winner

British Fantasy Awards — for fantasy works published in the UK, voted by British Fantasy Society members, juried since 2012 (1 nomination; 1 win) 

1979: “Jeffty Is Five ” (F&SF Jul 1977) — short story — winner

British SF Association Awards — for SF works published in the UK, voted by British SF Association members (1 nomination; 1 win) 

1979: Deathbird Stories (Harper & Row) — collection — winner

Locus Awards — for SF/F/H works, polled by readers of Locus Magazine (45 nominations; 18 wins)

2002: “Incognita, Inc.” (Hemispheres Jan 2001; Realms of Fantasy Aug 2001) — short story — 3rd place 

1998: Slippage (Mark V. Ziesing; Houghton Mifflin) — collection — winner 1998:”Repent Harlequin!” Said the Ticktockman (by HE, illustrated by Rick Berry) (Underwood Books) — art book — 4th place 

1995: 1, Robot: the Illustrated Screenplay (by HE & Isaac Asimov, illustrated by Mark Zug) (Warner Aspect) — art book — 3rd place 

1995: Mind Fields (by HE, text; Jacek Yerka, art) (Morpheus International) — art book — 2nd place 

1994: Mefisto In Onyx (Omni Oct 1993; Mark V. Ziesing) — novella — winner 

1990: Harlan Ellison’s Watching (Underwood-Miller) — nonfiction — 10th place 

1989: “The Function of Dream Sleep ” (Midnight Graffiti Jun 1988; Asimov’s mid-Dec 1988; Angry Candy) — novelette —winner 

1989: “Eidolons ” (F&SF Jul 1988) — short story — winner 

1989: Angry Candy (Houghton Mifflin) — collection — winner 

1988: The Essential Ellison: A 35-Year Retrospective (Nemo Press) — collection — 2nd place 1986: “Paladin of the Lost Hour (Universe 15; Twilight Zone Dec 1985) — novelette — winner 1986: “With Virgil Oddum at the East Pole” (Omni Jan 1985; Medea: Harlan’s World) — short story — winner 

1986: Medea: Harlan’s World (Phantasia; Bantam) — anthology — winner 

1986: An Edge in My Voice (Donning) — nonfiction/reference — 9th place 

1985: Sleepless Nights in the Procrustean Bed (Borgo Press) — nonfiction/reference — winner 1983: “Djinn, No Chaser ” (Twilight Zone Apr 1982) — novelette — winner 

1983: Stalking the Nightmare (Phantasia) — single author collection — 3rd place 

1982: “On the Slab ” (Omni Oct 1981) — short story — 28th place 

1981: “All the Lies That Are My Life ” (F&SF Nov 1980) — novella — 9th place 

1981: Shatterday (Houghton Mifflin) — single author collection — 2nd place 

1980: “All the Birds Come Home to Roost” (Playboy Mar 1979) — short story — 19th place 1979: “Count the Clock That Tells the Time” (Omni Dec 1978) — short story — winner 

1979: Strange Wine (Harper & Row) — single author collection — 2nd place 

1978: “Jeffty Is Five ” (F&SF Jut 1977) — short fiction — winner 

1977: “From A to Z, In the Chocolate Alphabet ” (F&SF Oct 1976) — short story — fifth place 1977: “Seeing ” (Andromeda 1) — short story — 6th place 

1976: “Croatoan ” (F&SF May 1975) — short story — winner 

1976: “Shatterday ” (Gallery Sep 1975) — short story — 14th place 

1976: Deathbird Stories (Harper & Row) — single author collection — 3rd place 

1975: “Adrift Just Off the Islets of Langerhans: Latitude 38° 54′ N, Longitude 77° 00′ 13″ W” (F&SF Oct 1974) — novelette —winner 

1975: “Catman ” (Final Stage) — novelette — 14th place 

1975: “I’m Looking for Kadak” (Wandering Stars) — novelette — 4th place 

1975: Approaching Oblivion (Walker) — single author collection — 4th place 

1975: critic — 7th place 1974:”The Deathbird ” (F&SF Mar 1973) — short fiction — winner 

1974: critic — 12th place 1973:”Basilisk ” (F&SF Aug 1972) — short fiction — winner 1973:”On the Downhill Side ” (Universe 2) — short fiction — 13th place 

1973: Again, Dangerous Visions (Doubleday) — original anthology — winner 

1972: “The Human Operators” by HE & A. E. van Vogt) (F&SF Jan 1971) — short fiction — 12th place 

1972: Partners in Wonder (Walker) — reprint anth/collection — 7th place 

1971: “Brillo” (by Ben Bova & HE) (Analog Aug 1970) — short fiction — 8th place 

1971: “The Region Between” (Galaxy Mar 1970; Five Fates) — short fiction — winner 1971: “Runesmith” by HE & Theodore Sturgeon) (F&SF May 1970) — short fiction — 7th place

OTHER AWARDS 


Analog Readers Poll — for stories, articles, and art published by Analog, polled by readers (1 nomination) 

1979:”The Man Who Was Heavily into Revenge ” (Analog Aug 1978) — short story — 5th place 

Asimov’s Reader Poll — for stories, poems, and are published by Asimov’s, polled by readers (4 nominations; 1 win) 

1990: “The Few, the Proud ” (Asimov’s Mar 1989) — short story — 8th place 

1989: “The Function of Dream Sleep ” (Asimov’s Jun 1988) — novelette — 4th place 

1988: “I, Robot: The Movie” (Asimov’s Nov,Dec,mid-Dec 1987) — special award — winner 1987: “Laugh Track ” (Asimov’s mid-Dec 1986) — short story — 2nd place 

Balrog Awards — for fantasy works, presented an annual FoolsCon in Kansas City (6 nominations) 

1983: Stalking the Nightmare (Phantasia) — collection/anthology — nomination 

1983: for writing and encouraging new writers — professional achievement — nomination 

1982: “Grail ” (Twilight Zone Apr 1981) — short fiction — nomination 

1981: for contributions to fantasy literature — professional achievement — nomination 

1979: “Jeffty Is Five ” (F&SF Jut 1977) — short fiction — nomination 

1979: Strange Wine (Harper & Row) — collection/anthology — nomination 

Deathrealm Awards — for horror works, voted by readers of Deathrealm magazine (1 nomination; 1 win) 

1996: “Chatting with Anubis ” (Harlan Ellison’s Dream Corridor Jun 1995) — short fiction — winner 

Ditmar Awards — for Australian SF/F, voted by members of Australian National SF Convention (1 nomination) 1971:”The Region Between” (Galaxy Mar 1970) — international sf — nomination 

HOMer Awards — for SF/F works, voted by members of SF/F forum on CompuServe (1 nomination) 

1994: Mefisto In Onyx (Omni Oct 1993) — novella — nomination 

Interzone Readers Poll — for stories published in Interzone magazine, polled by readers (1 nomination) 

1989: all-time best sf author — 12th place (tie) 

Jupiter Awards — for SF novels and stories, voted by instructors of SF courses in higher education (3 nominations; 2 wins) 

1978: “Jeffty Is Five ” (F&SF Jul 1977) — short story — winner 

1975: “Sleeping Dogs ” (Analog Oct 1984) — short story — nomination 

1974: “The Deathbird ” (F&SF Mar 1973) — novelette — winner 

Prometheus Awards — for SF works on libertarian themes, voted by members of the Libertarian Futurist Society (6 nominations; 1 win) 

2015: ‘Repent, Harlequin!’ said the Ticktockman” — hall of fame — winner 

2014: ‘Repent, Harlequin!’ said the Ticktockman” — hall of fame — nomination 

2013: ‘Repent, Harlequin!’ said the Ticktockman” — hall of fame — nomination 

2012: ‘Repent, Harlequin!’ said the Ticktockman” — hall of fame — nomination 

2011: ‘Repent, Harlequin!’ said the Ticktockman” — hall of fame — nomination 

2010: ‘Repent, Harlequin!’ said the Ticktockman” — hall of fame — nomination 

Science Fiction Chronicle Readers Poll — for SF/F works, polled by readers of Science Fiction Chronicle magazine (1 nomination) 

1986: “Paladin of the Lost Hour ” (Universe 15; Twilight Zone Dec 1985) — novelette — 3rd place 

Seiun Awards — for SF/F works published in Japan, voted by members of annual Japanese SF Con (1 nomination) 

2017: “The Deathbird ” — translated story — nomination 

SFWA Awards — for works and contributions to SF, presented by the SFFWA (1 nomination; 1 win) 

2001: 2000X (by HE, host and story editor; Yuri Rasovsky, producer and director; Warren Dewey, sound engineer) —Bradbury Award — winner 

Worldcon Special Convention Award — special honors presented by the committee of the World SF Convention (3 nominations; 3 wins) 

2006: winner 

1972: for Again, Dangerous Visions — winner 

1968: for Dangerous Visions — winner

AS JUDGE 

World Fantasy Awards — for Fantasy works; juried, with nominations from World Fantasy Con members 1977 

Spectrum Awards — for SF/F/H artworks, juried 2001, 1996