FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE, April 14, 2026
2026 PROMETHEUS AWARD FINALISTS CHOSEN FOR BEST NOVEL
Works by Dave Freer, Karl K. Gallagher, Sarah Hoyt, J. Kenton Pierce and Harry Turtledove selected as finalists
The Libertarian Futurist Society, a nonprofit all-volunteer international organization of liberty-loving science
fiction/fantasy fans, has announced five finalists for the Best Novel category of the Prometheus Awards.
Here are the Best Novel finalists in brief, in alphabetical order by
author: Storm-Dragon, by Dave Freer (Raconteur Press); War by
Other Means, by Karl K. Gallagher (Kelt Haven Press); No Man’s Land, by Sarah Hoyt
(Goldport Press); A Kiss for Damocles, by J. Kenton Pierce (Raconteur Press);
and Powerless, by Harry Turtledove (CAEZIK SF & Fantasy.)
Full-length reviews of each Best Novel finalist, explaining how each fits the distinctive focus of the Prometheus Awards, have been (or soon will be) posted on the Prometheus Blog. Meanwhile, here are capsule descriptions of all five finalists:
- Storm-Dragon, by Dave Freer (Raconteur Press): The Young Adult science fiction
novel centers on a boy who saves and adopts an intelligent alien pet on an ocean-dominated colony planet with dangers
both alien and human. In the spirit of Heinlein’s Farmer in the Sky and Alan Dean
Foster’s Flinx novels, the story centers on Skut and Podge, two resourceful middle-school boys from
refugee families. As they make friends in their new home, the boys confront class bullies and repressive teachers,
cope with mob behavior and navigate the ocean’s tricky shores. In the process, they interact and communicate
more with their orphaned young “dragon,” an electrosensitive six-limbed alien creature who may be more
intelligent and formidable than it appears. Aimed primarily at ages 8 to 18 and avoiding explicit ideology, the novel
gradually expands to include parents, administrators and other adults enmeshed in the colony town’s increasingly
corrupt politics, which threatens livelihoods through onerous regulations, taxes and property confiscations.
Ultimately, a violent invasion from human raiders threatens the colonists’ broader rights. With a strong career
background in fishing and oceanography, Freer focuses more on the plausible ecology and boy-centered adventures than
the politics of this plausible frontier planet, while allowing his live-and-let-live, peace and freedom themes to
emerge naturally.
- War by Other Means, by Karl K. Gallagher (Kelt Haven Press): Finding ways to come
to mutual agreements through diplomacy and trading rather than coercion is a central theme in Book 7 of
Gallagher’s frequent-Prometheus-finalist Fall of the Censor series. Following the liberation of dozens
of worlds from the Censorate oppression, newly appointed ambassador Wynny Landry strives to prevent the rebellion from
falling apart. Her task: convincing their governments to cooperate and forge trade deals for excess missiles despite
differing cultures, interests and pressures. The novel centers on problems arising on Fiera, which formed a world
government following the Censorite attack and atomic-bombing of 16 cities. So many state-commanded resources were put
into defense and so much manpower lost to conscription that Fiera’s economy is failing. Meanwhile local politics
keeps warships nearby, preventing them from supporting the alliance’s interplanetary defense. The story reminds
us that even good and democratic societies can falter when politics, taxation, conscription and pork-barrel politics
undermine their freedom, strength and adaptability. Among the libertarian themes: war as the health of the state, how
governments can slide into despotism, the evils of slavery, the dysfunction of pork-barrel politics, and how
censorship only makes people lust for forbidden fruit.
- No
Man’s Land, by Sarah Hoyt (Goldport Press): The three-volume novel blends science fiction, fantasy,
suspense, mystery, romance, adventure, political intrigue and a plausible “alien” biology in a universe
where sufficiently advanced science is indistinguishable from magic. In an interstellar future with settled human
planets of widely differing societies, a freedom-favoring federation sends an ambassador to certify the final stages
of induction of a previously lost colony. The first-contact story eventually focuses on a hidden world where the
population has been genetically shaped to make everyone hermaphroditic. Both epic and intimate, with chapters
alternating in perspective between the young human ambassador and an archmage, the novel becomes a love story about
found family amidst a wider conspiracy threatening the federation’s commitment to equal liberty. Ultimately, in
a multi-layered work launching her Chronicles of Elly series, Hoyt gradually weaves in a variety of
libertarian themes while offering a radically different take on gender and sexuality than Ursula K. Le Guin’s
classic novel The Left Hand of Darkness. Among them: the virtues and benefits of
cooperation, individualism, private property, tolerance, equal justice and individual choice, providing a stark
contrast with the evils of aggression, tyranny, slavery and discrimination against sexual minorities.
- A
Kiss for Damocles, by J. Kenton Pierce (Raconteur Press): The science fiction saga, which launches the
author’s Tales From the Long Night series, illuminates the ethics and efficacy of free trade and
self-defense as a proper foundation for civilization. The novel is set on a colony planet where humans in towns and
homesteading communities are struggling to recover centuries after a catastrophic attack and volcanic cataclysm that
set back and severely limits their use of advanced technology. At the story’s heart is Shai, a young homesteader
facing harsh frontier conditions, corrupt Townie politics, dangerous native species, and sinister forces amidst
still-functional A.I.-powered orbiting war machines. Pierce celebrates the self-reliance and resilience of
self-regulating frontier communities that survive and evolve based on the hard-won realities of voluntarism, mutual
respect and cooperation. But this is also a cautionary tale about the deceptive idealism of a command-and-control
ideology and the perennial tendency towards abuse of power, reflected in the Townies’ push for higher taxation,
fiat money and indoctrinating state takeover of education. Narrating from her wry but hopeful perspective, Shai
becomes a leader in her community’s struggles to defend their freedom, preserve their heritage and restore their
world.
- Powerless,
by Harry Turtledove (Caezick SF & Fantasy): Inspired by Vaclav Havel’s classic essay “Power of the
Powerless,” this alternate history is set decades ago in a communist America where small moments of defiance or
quiet resistance to governmental repression have unexpectedly big consequences. Set in the western United States
dominated by a Soviet-Union-fostered socialist tyranny, the novel begins with one shopkeeper’s impulsive and
fed-up act of taking down from his grocery storefront window a required propaganda poster expressing solidarity with
the state revolution. In a dystopian society demanding utter submission and insistent on propping up its legitimacy,
that simple act has a ripple effect on the shopkeeper, his wife and two children, and the wider world. Focusing on
small acts of decency and honesty, the realistic yet inspiring story reveals how communism smothers the human spirit,
denies reality, censors news, imposes lies and undercuts everyday life even when it doesn’t rise to the level of
genocide or outright totalitarianism but strives to embody Czechoslovakia’s 1968 vision of "socialism with a
human face.” Mirroring the psychological and political distress of many today for speaking the
truth, Powerless is timely in reflecting the challenges in societies that claim to
uphold freedom but suppress facts to enforce conformity.
Fourteen 2025 novels were nominated by LFS members for this year's award. Other Best Novel nominees, listed in
alphabetical order by author: Red Heart, by Max Harms; Forged for Destiny and Forged for Prophecy, by Andrew Knighton;
All the Humans Are Sleeping, by John C.A. Manley; For
Emma, by Ewan Morrison; Planting Life: Shut the Kingdom, by Laura
Montgomery; Where the Axe is Buried, by Ray Nayler; The
Underachiever, by David A. Price; and Caballeros del Camino, by R.H. Snow.
The Best Novel winner will receive an engraved plaque with a one-ounce gold coin. An online Prometheus awards ceremony,
open to the public, is tentatively planned for mid-August. Science fiction fan and author Ilya Somin, a law professor at
George Mason University and the B. Kenneth Simon Chair in Constitutional Studies at the Cato Institute, will be this
year’s keynote speaker and celebrity guest presenter. The date of the ceremony will be announced in mid July once the
winners are known for both annual categories, including the Prometheus Hall of Fame for Best Classic Fiction.
The Prometheus Award, sponsored by the Libertarian Futurist Society (LFS), was established and first presented in 1979,
making it one of the most enduring awards after the Nebula and Hugo awards, and one of the oldest fan-based awards
currently given in sf.
The Prometheus Hall of Fame category for Best Classic Fiction, launched in 1983, is presented annually with
the Best Novel category. This year’s Hall of Fame finalists
are The
Star Dwellers, a 1961 novel by James
Blish; Brave
New World, a 1932 novel by Aldous
Huxley; That
Hideous Strength, a 1945 novel by C.S.
Lewis; Salt,
a 2000 novel by Adam Roberts;
and Singularity
Sky, a 2003 novel by Charles Stross.
The Prometheus Awards recognize outstanding works of speculative or fantastical fiction (including science fiction and fantasy) that dramatize the perennial conflict between Liberty and Power, favor voluntarism and cooperation over institutionalized coercion, expose the abuses and excesses of coercive government, and/or critique or satirize authoritarian systems, ideologies and assumptions.
Above all, the Prometheus Awards strive to recognize speculative fiction that champions individual rights, based on the moral/legal principle of non-aggression, as the ethical and practical foundation for peace, prosperity, progress, justice, tolerance, mutual respect, civility and civilization itself.
All LFS members have the right to nominate eligible works for all categories of the Prometheus Awards, while
publishers and authors are welcome to submit potentially eligible works for consideration using
the guidelines linked from the LFS website’s main page.
A judging committee, drawn from the membership and chaired by LFS co-founder Michael Grossberg, selects the Prometheus Award finalists for Best Novel from members’ nominations. Following the selection of finalists, all LFS upper-level members (Full members, Sponsors and Benefactors) have the right to vote on the Best Novel finalist slate to choose the annual winner.
Membership in the Libertarian Futurist Society is open to any
freedom-loving science fiction/fantasy fan interested in how speculative or fantastical fiction can enhance an
appreciation of the value of liberty and broaden public recognition of the dangers and evils of tyranny and
the abuses more prevalent under the State’s centralized and coercive powers.
For a full list of past Prometheus Award winners in all categories,
visit our site. For reviews and commentary on these finalists and other works of interest to the LFS,
visit the Prometheus blog. For more information, contact LFS Publicity Chair
Chris Hibbert (publicity@lfs.org).