By Hayden Trenholm
The  voting  for the 2010 Prix Aurora Awards ends on Saturday, May 22.  The  Awards themselves will be given out  at a banquet the next day.  By the  time you read this, my novel, Steel Whispers, may have won the Aurora  for best  Canadian SF novel of the year.  Or  maybe not.  And what difference will  it make anyway?  Why does an Award  voted on by a few hundred fans of the field matter?
Of  course,  you could say the same thing about the Hugos (less than a thousand fans  generally determine those) or even the Nebula (voted on by the fewer  than 1500  members of the Science Fiction Writers of America).  Heck,  why not throw in the Golden Globes  (selected by a couple of hundred foreign journalists) or the granddaddy  of them  all, the Oscars, voted on by the 6000 members of the Academy?
But,  of  course, awards matter, the Auroras no less than any other.  In  fact, on a per capita basis more  people nominate and vote for the Auroras than any of the other SF awards  around  the world.  The Auroras are a symbol  of professional success for writers and artists (and an acknowledgment  of  volunteer contributions with the fan awards) and most – though not all –  major  Canadian SF writers have been or will be nominated or win one in the  course of  their career.
The  Awards  also help to establish you as a significant player in the field.  Since  winning my own Aurora for short  fiction two years ago, I’ve been more welcome as a guest at conventions  and, I  think, my stories get a little harder look by editors.  Was  winning the Aurora the only  factor?  I hope not.  I’ve worked very hard to  promote my work  and to improve it.  But being able  to call myself an Aurora-winning writer hasn’t hurt.
Perhaps  the  most important element in the whole awards business is not in the  winning at  all.  Like pursuing happiness –  whether or not you ever achieve it – pursuing an Aurora has its own  rewards.  Obviously, no one can vote  for your work if they never heard of it.   The annual awards process encourages writers to build their fan  base and  their web presence.  Editors and  publishers like writers who do a good job of promoting themselves and  their  work. In the long run, the side effects may have more to do with your  long-term  success as a professional writer than actually having a few shiny  statues  sitting on your shelf.  
Still,   whenever I feel the urge to pack it in as too much work for too little  reward, I  like to look up at my shimmering Aurora on its maple base and remember  that,  sometimes, it’s all worthwhile.
***
Hayden  Trenholm’s  short fiction has appeared in On Spec, TransVersions, Tesseracts 6
.  Neo-Opsis,  Challenging Destiny, Talebones, Gaslight Grotesque
 and on CBC radio.   In 2008, after a record fourth  consecutive short fiction nomination, he won the Aurora for his novella,  "Like  Water in the Desert."  His novel,  Defining Diana, was released by Bundoran Press in 2008 and was  nominated  for an Aurora Award in the long fiction category.  A  sequel, Steel Whispers, was  published in August 2009 and is a nominee for the Aurora this year.   The third book of the Steele  Chronicles, Stealing Home, will be published later this year.
Steel Whispers by Hayden Trenholm 
 Four dead Borg and counting. Serial killer, gang violence or civil war?  While the Special Detection Unit hunts for answers, a terrified family  searchs for their Disappeared daughter, and war between society's elites  takes an even nastier turn. Borg and genetic technology is evolving  exponentially and Frank Steele finds himself up against unfathomable  enemies.
Franks needs to find the key that ties it all together. He's sworn to protect every citizen. It's his duty as a cop. But now it's gotten personal and Frank has to face the ultimate test - investigating the death of his own son.
Franks needs to find the key that ties it all together. He's sworn to protect every citizen. It's his duty as a cop. But now it's gotten personal and Frank has to face the ultimate test - investigating the death of his own son.

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