| Ignyte Award | |
|---|---|
| Awarded for | Best science fiction, fantasy and horror works of the previous year. |
| Country | United States |
| Presented by | FIYAH Literary Magazine |
| First award | 2020 (2020) |
| Website | https://ignyteawards.fiyahlitmag.com |
The Ignyte Awards are an annual literary award for the best science fiction, fantasy, and horror works and achievements of the previous year. Established in 2020 by writers L. D. Lewis and Suzan Palumbo as an off-shoot of FIYAH Literary Magazine, the awards aim to celebrate diversity and inclusion in the speculative fiction genre, and are presented in 15 categories spanning fiction, non-fiction and community service. Trophies are awarded to winners at FIYAHCON, an annual speculative fiction convention focused on black, indigenous and people-of-color perspectives in the genre.[1][2]
The Ignyte Awards are part-juried and part-public vote: finalists are selected by the convention committee, and winners are then determined in an online ballot.[3]
In 2025, the Ignyte Awards were themselves awarded a Special Locus Award, the citation being for "Celebrating Excellence in Genre".[4]
Categories
| Category | Description[5] |
|---|---|
| Ignyte Award for Outstanding Novel – Adult | Awarded for works over 40,000 words for an adult audience, written by up to 2 authors |
| Ignyte Award for Outstanding Novel – Young Adult | Awarded for works over 40,000 words for a young adult audience, written by up to 2 authors |
| Ignyte Award for Outstanding Middle Grade | Awarded for longform works for the middle grade market |
| Ignyte Award for Outstanding Novella | Awarded for works between 17,500 - 39,999 words |
| Ignyte Award for Outstanding Novelette | Awarded for works between 7,500 - 17.499 words |
| Ignyte Award for Outstanding Short Story | Awarded for works between 2,000 - 7,499 words |
| Ignyte Award for Outstanding Speculative Poetry | Awarded for single poems which are speculative in genre |
| Ignyte Award – Critics Award | Awarded for critical analysis of speculative fiction works, at either a professional or fan level |
| Ignyte Award for Outstanding Fiction Podcast | Awarded for podcasts which produce, host, or perform original fiction as at least 75% of their annual output |
| Ignyte Award for Outstanding Artist | Recognizes a single artist for their professional output. An artist's entire portfolio may be considered, but must have at least 1 commissioned piece in the nominated year |
| Ignyte Award for Outstanding Comics Team | Awarded to teams, including writers, artists, and letters, which work to produce an eligible comic volume |
| Ignyte Award for Outstanding Anthology/Collected Works | Awarded for either an anthology (featuring multiple authors) or a collection (featuring works by a single author) |
| Ignyte Award for Outstanding Creative Nonfiction | Awarded for essays or nonfiction academic works related to the field of speculative fiction |
| Ember Award | Recognizes individuals for their extended bodies of work which have not historically been recognized by awards entities |
| Ignyte Award — Community Award | Awarded to an individual, team, or organization whose focus has aided in diversifying and making healthier the field of speculative fiction by emphasizing inclusion. |
References
- ^ Stubby the Rocket (August 7, 2020). "FIYAH Announces Creation of Ignyte Awards As Part of the First FIYAHCON". Tor.com. Macmillan. Retrieved December 17, 2021.
- ^ Millanzi, Riziki (4 October 2021). Levontin, Polina (ed.). "FiyahCon 2021 report by Riziki Millanzi". Vector. British Science Fiction Association. Retrieved 3 January 2022.
- ^ Tejada, Andrew (17 October 2020). "Announcing the Winners of the Inaugural Ignyte Awards!". Tor.com. Macmillan. Retrieved 3 January 2022.
- ^ "2025 Locus Awards Winners". June 21, 2025.
- ^ "About the Awards". Ignyte Awards. Retrieved 4 Jan 2026.