World Fantasy Awards 1970s: A decade of winners

The 1970s World Fantasy Awards represent a pivotal moment when fantasy literature—long dismissed as mere escapism—finally commanded serious critical attention. Established in 1975, the World Fantasy Awards arrived at precisely the right cultural moment: a decade when Stephen King was reshaping horror, when Tolkien’s posthumous influence still reverberated through bookstores, and when writers were eager to prove that fantasy could be as artistically ambitious as any literary genre. The award’s early years captured something essential about the era—a willingness to honor ornate, imaginative prose alongside emotional depth and thematic complexity that refused easy categorization.

The decade’s winners showcase an intoxicating range of what fantasy could accomplish. Patricia A. McKillip’s The Forgotten Beasts of Eld brought lyrical, almost musical prose to epic worldbuilding; Richard Matheson’s Bid Time Return anchored romantic fantasy in genuine human longing; and Fritz Leiber—who appeared twice, a testament to his unshakable influence—proved that grand cosmic adventure never lost its power. Yet perhaps most significantly, Michael Moorcock’s lush, decadent Gloriana closed out the decade by suggesting that fantasy’s greatest strength lay not in quests or dragons, but in exploring the strange, the sensual, and the philosophically unresolved.

These early World Fantasy Awards winners reveal a genre finding its voice during an era of tremendous creative ferment, when fantasy writers were expanding the form’s possibilities in ways that would influence everything to come. Below, explore the full decade of honorees who shaped this remarkable period.

1975

Best Novel

Best Short Fiction

  • “Pages from a Young Girl’s Journal” by Robert Aickman

1976

Best Novel

  • Bid Time Return by Richard Matheson

Best Short Fiction

  • “Belsen Express” by Fritz Leiber

1977

Best Novel

Best Short Fiction

  • “There’s a Long, Long Trail A-Winding” by Russell Kirk

1978

Best Novel

Best Short Fiction

  • “The Chimney” by Ramsey Campbell

1979

Best Novel

Best Short Fiction

  • “Naples” by Avram Davidson