The Libertarian Futurist Society is offering U.S. libraries the opportunity to add a brand-new, donated set of award-winning novels to their shelves to expand their collection of notable and diverse science fiction.
For more details about the offer, the selective list of titles and how librarians can request a set for their library, visit the LFS website’s Prometheus Awards Collection page.
Robert Heinlein
Sarah Hoyt
Vernor Vinge
F. Paul Wilson
Terry Pratchett
Daniel Suarez
Poul Anderson
Kurt Vonnegut
Ken MacLeod
C. J. Cherryh
Neal Stephenson
Travis Corcoran
L. Neil Smith
Barry Longyear
Dave Freer
Jo Walton
George Orwell
Ursula. Le Guin
Ayn Rand
Help nominate fiction and vote for the only
annual award for best pro-freedom fiction: the Prometheus Awards for Best Novel and Best Classic Fiction, plus
occasional Special Awards. All the writers listed above (and many more) have won Prometheus Awards for their
fiction. -- Author Daniel Suarez, two-time Prometheus Award winner
for Best Novel for Influx (2016) and Critical Mass (2024)
—
author-songwriter Leslie Fish (“The Horseman’s Daughter”), frequent filk
guest at sf conventions If you enjoy fiction and science fiction that dramatizes the value of freedom, and are excited by the
possibilities that a free society unleashes, then we invite you to become a part of LFS. If you are intrigued by
libertarianism and futurism, and the cross-pollination between these two dynamic fields, consider this
decentralized coalition of free spirits working to shape a free future. To join, donate, or subscribe, please visit our membership and donation page. To uphold the high standards of the Prometheus Awards, full members and above are responsible for
obtaining and reading all the finalists in a category before casting their votes. If you wish to vote for the
Prometheus Award for Best Novel and are willing to support the LFS at a higher level, consider becoming an LFS
Sponsor or Benefactor. The Libertarian Futurist Society is a nonprofit organization with federal tax-exempt status. If you would like to support our activities, please consider making a tax-deductible donation. Mail donation checks, marked "donation," to: Or send a donation via credit card, using one of the PayPal donation options Publishers, authors and sf/fantasy fans may submit works of fiction for LFS consideration for all categories of the Prometheus Awards. For more details, what required information to submit and who to contact, please read this submission-guidelines letter. Help us raise our visibility and promote new memberships by
downloading and printing this introductory LFS membership flyer (pdf). You can distribute it easily at upcoming conventions, which often have a place for free flyers and other literatures. Or better yet, print a few and hand them out personally to people you meet who might share our love of liberty, science fiction and a freer future. To inquire about serving on an awards committee or to nominate a book, please contact Michael Grossberg. For Hall of Fame Nominations, please contact Bill Stoddard. You can change your membership address by sending email to addresschange at lfs.org. For general inquiries, send to "contact" at our domain (lfs.org), and someone will respond.
Current officers and directors are listed here. All trademarks and copyrights property of their owners.
“Authoritarianism is on the march in this world once
more, and I’m convinced the first step in resisting
despots is to be free in one's own thoughts and
imagination. LFS is doing great work to keep free-thinking
science fiction alive, and for that I thank you.”
“(In sf fandom), the Prometheus is now considered third after the Hugo and
Nebula.... I first heard it mentioned more than 30 years ago, described as a ‘freethinkers’
literary award’ of considerable virtue, but not on a par with the Nebula or Hugo. ...
You’re coming up in the world of Sci-Fi, my friends!”
"The Prometheus Award is an interesting case … The results are as remarkable as the award's
longevity … the LFS ranges far outside the borders of conventional American libertarian
thought … with equally diverse selections on the nominee lists.… following this
particular award can be rewarding for readers of all stripes"
—"40 Years of the Prometheus Award," a TOR.com
article by James Davis Nicoll (April 2019)
"Libertarian SF is showing no signs of waning. … Libertarian-leaning authors have had an
outsized, lasting influence on the field. Libertarians even have their own SF literature awards. Each
year, the Prometheus and Prometheus Hall of Fame awards are given out by the Libertarian Futurist
Society. … Unlike most ideologies that advocate forms of protectionism and Luddite
restrictionism, the libertarian outlook values choice, freedom, … a general openness to radical
new ideas and an instinctive rejection of stale convention and custom … Perhaps this is why so
much of SF expresses itself as dystopian fiction, a genre which, by its very nature, cannot but take
on a libertarian flavor. Totalitarianism, war, and wide-scale oppression is almost always carried out
by state force. Liberation, accordingly, must come in the form of negative rights — that is,
"freedom from" — and voluntarism." —-- "The
Libertarian History of Science Fiction," by Jordan Alexander Hill, Quillette (published
June 2020, on quillette.com)
"As a long-time libertarian and science fiction fan, I consider my Libertarian Futurist Society membership
one of the best deals around. How else would I learn of the new SF books that I'd be most likely to want to
read? LFS dramatically reduces my search time--and that's very valuable to me."
—Robert W. Poole, Founder and Past-President, Reason Foundation
"People come to libertarianism through fiction. They come through Ayn Rand... Robert Heinlein.... L. Neil
Smith. When he established the Prometheus Awards, Smith was acknowledging the political contributions that
fiction makes to libertarianism. He recognized its importance and influence, namely that it fire the
imagination, it fires the vision of man and woman, and it is absolutely essential to inspire people."
—Author Wendy McElroy, at the 2000 Prometheus Worldcon awards
"Uniquely among political movements, many of libertarianism's most influential texts have been by SF
writers... It seems likely that the influence of the (Libertarian SF) movement within sf will grow."
—- The Encyclopedia of Science
Fiction
Join the Libertarian Futurist Society
Libertarian Futurist Society
650 Castro St. Suite 120-433
Mountain View, CA 94041Award Submissions
LFS outreach flyer
Award Information
Contact info
Officers and Directors
All else copyright LFS 2003-2025