Locus Awards 1980s: A decade of winners
The 1980s were a golden age for science fiction and fantasy, and the Locus Awards—voted on by readers of Locus Magazine and widely considered the most prestigious fan-voted honors in speculative fiction—captured that creative explosion beautifully. This was the era when epic world-building reached new heights, when first-time novelists could reshape entire genres, and when established masters like Gene Wolfe and Isaac Asimov continued to produce their finest work. The decade saw the Locus Awards expand their categories to better reflect the field’s diversity, adding a Best First Novel award in 1981 and eventually a separate Horror Novel category by decade’s end, signaling how richly the genre landscape was evolving.
What strikes you looking back at these ten years is how certain names dominated without ever feeling repetitive. David Brin swept through the mid-1980s with Startide Rising, The Postman, and The Uplift War—three vastly different explorations of humanity’s place in a vast cosmos. Gene Wolfe’s Book of the New Sun tetralogy showed up multiple times, establishing him as a titan of literary science fiction. Meanwhile, Marion Zimmer Bradley’s The Mists of Avalon in 1984 exemplified how fantasy was becoming increasingly ambitious in scope and thematic complexity, reshaping Arthurian legend for a new generation. By the late ’80s, Orson Scott Card emerged as a force, claiming multiple categories with Speaker for the Dead, Seventh Son, and Red Prophet—a run that signaled the beginning of his generation’s ascendance.
The breadth of winners across these years reveals something essential about the period: readers were hungry for innovation, for stories that pushed boundaries and refused easy categorization. Below, you’ll find the complete decade of Locus Award winners that shaped speculative fiction’s trajectory and continue to influence the field today.
1980
Best Fantasy Novel
Harpist in the Wind by Patricia A. McKillip
Best Science Fiction Novel
Titan by John Varley
1981
Best Fantasy Novel
Lord Valentine’s Castle by Robert Silverberg
Best First Novel
Dragon’s Egg by Robert L. Forward
Best Science Fiction Novel
The Snow Queen by Joan D. Vinge
1982
Best Fantasy Novel
The Claw of the Conciliator by Gene Wolfe
Best First Novel
- Starship & Haiku by Somtow Sucharitkul
Best Science Fiction Novel
The Many-Colored Land by Julian May
1983
Best Fantasy Novel
- The Sword of the Lictor by Gene Wolfe
Best First Novel
Courtship Rite by Donald Kingsbury
Best Science Fiction Novel
Foundation’s Edge by Isaac Asimov
1984
Best Fantasy Novel
The Mists of Avalon by Marion Zimmer Bradley
Best First Novel
Tea with the Black Dragon by R. A. MacAvoy
Best Science Fiction Novel
Startide Rising by David Brin
1985
Best Fantasy Novel
Job: A Comedy of Justice by Robert A. Heinlein
Best First Novel
- The Wild Shore by Kim Stanley Robinson
Best Science Fiction Novel
The Integral Trees by Larry Niven
1986
Best Fantasy Novel
Trumps of Doom by Roger Zelazny
Best First Novel
Contact by Carl Sagan
Best Science Fiction Novel
The Postman by David Brin
1987
Best Fantasy Novel
Soldier of the Mist by Gene Wolfe
Best First Novel
The Hercules Text by Jack McDevitt
Best Science Fiction Novel
Speaker for the Dead by Orson Scott Card
1988
Best Fantasy Novel
- Seventh Son by Orson Scott Card
Best First Novel
War for the Oaks by Emma Bull
Best Science Fiction Novel
The Uplift War by David Brin
1989
Best Fantasy Novel
Red Prophet by Orson Scott Card
Best First Novel
- Desolation Road by Ian McDonald
Best Horror Novel
- Those Who Hunt the Night by Barbara Hambly
Best Science Fiction Novel
Cyteen by C. J. Cherryh