Torgersen's stories have won the Analog AnLab readers' choice award three different times, and he was a triple finalist in 2012 for the John W. Campbell Award for Best New Writer, the Hugo Award for best novelette, and the Nebula Award for best novelette. In addition to short fiction, Torgersen has two published novels, including the 2019 Dragon Award winner, A Star-Wheeled Sky. The Who's Who page for Analog magazine lists him as one of the "leading writers in the genre".[1]
In 2015 Torgensen took charge of the Sad Puppies movement, an unsuccessful annual attempt to win awards for a slate of nominees against alleged unfair bias in the voting in the Hugo Awards. He was replaced the following campaign.[2][3]
Torgersen was born April 6, 1974.[4][5] His first public credit was as an unpaid script writer for locally-produced space opera serial Searcher & Stallion, which broadcast on Salt Lake City community radio KRCL FM in the early 1990s.[6] "Footprints" was published in North Seattle Community College's 2002 Licton Springs Review.[7]
In 2009, his story "Exanastasis" won third place in the third quarter Writers of the Future contest.[8] Torgersen's first professional sale occurred shortly thereafter, when editor Stanley Schmidt bought Torgersen's novelette "Outbound" for Analog Science Fiction and Fact, and the story was selected in the Analog AnLab readers' poll for Best Novelette for 2010.[9] His novelette "Ray of Light" was the cover story on the December 2011 issue of Analog and was nominated for both the Nebula Award[10] and the Hugo Award.[11] He was also nominated for the 2012 John W. Campbell Award for Best New Writer.
Torgersen received two nominations for the 2014 Hugo Awards: for the novella "The Chaplain's Legacy" and the novelette "The Exchange Officers".[12] "The Chaplain's Legacy" also won the 2014 AML Award for Short Fiction.[13]The Chaplain's War, published by Baen Books in October 2014, took his Analog stories "The Chaplain's Assistant" and the AnLab-winning "The Chaplain's Legacy" and expanded them into a fix-up novel.[14] During the 2015 Hugo nomination and voting period, Torgersen led the Sad Puppies movement,[15] which claimed that popular works were often unfairly passed over by Hugo voters in favor of more literary works, or stories with progressive political themes.[16][17]
He won his third Analog AnLab readers' choice award for the novelette "Life Flight".[18] In December 2018, Baen published A Star-Wheeled Sky, which won the 2019 Dragon Award for "Best Science Fiction Novel".[19] In February 2020 Brad was the Literary Guest of Honor and Keynote Speaker at the 38th annual Life, the Universe, & Everything professional science fiction and fantasy arts symposium.[20]
"The Hideki Line" in Spark: A Creative Anthology, Volume IV edited by Brian Lewis (January 2014, Empire & Great Jones Little Press, ISBN978-0-9888072-9-7)
"Blood and Mirrors" in Racers of the Night: Science Fiction Stories edited by Brad R. Torgersen (August 2014, WordFire Press, ISBN978-1-61475-232-5)
"Peacekeeper" in Racers of the Night: Science Fiction Stories edited by Brad R. Torgersen (August 2014, WordFire Press, ISBN978-1-61475-232-5)
"Recapturing the Dream" in Racers of the Night: Science Fiction Stories edited by Brad R. Torgersen (August 2014, WordFire Press, ISBN978-1-61475-232-5)
"The Flamingo Girl" in Racers of the Night: Science Fiction Stories edited by Brad R. Torgersen (August 2014, WordFire Press, ISBN978-1-61475-232-5)
"The Ghost Conductor of the Interstellar Express" in Trajectories: Stories of Exploration edited by Dave Creek (March 2016, Hydra Publications, ISBN978-1-942212-36-2)
"Spirits with Visions" in 2113: Stories Inspired by the Music of Rush edited by Kevin J. Anderson and John McFetridge (April 2016, ECW Press, ISBN978-1-77041-292-7)
"The Diddley Bow Horror" in Redneck Eldritch edited by Nathan Shumate (April 2016, Cold Fusion Media, ISBN978-0-692-69291-2)
"Mars Court Rules" in Galactic Games edited by Bryan Thomas Schmidt (June 2016, Baen Books, ISBN978-1-4767-8158-7)
"Purytans" in Analog Science Fiction and Fact edited by Trevor Quachri (July–August 2016, Dell Magazines)
"Hymns of the Mothers" in Forbidden Thoughts edited by Jason Rennie (January 2017, Superversive Press, ISBN978-0-9945163-7-4)
"The Unsent Letter" in Freedom's Light: Short Stories edited by Lindsay Galloway, Kia Heavey, and Matthew Souders (January 2017, Victory Fiction, ISBN978-1-5204-0024-2)
"45" in MAGA 2020 & Beyond edited by Marina Fontaine, Jason Rennie, and Dawn Witzke (November 2017, Superversive Press, ISBN978-1-925645-48-4)
"Old Dogs, New Tricks" in Avatar Dreams: Scientific Visions of Avatar Technology edited by Kevin J. Anderson and Mike Resnick (April 2018, WordFire Press, ISBN978-1-61475-598-2)
"For Man or Beast" in To Be Men: Stories Celebrating Masculinity edited by Sirius Métier (June 2018, Superversive Press, ISBN978-1-925645-14-9)
"Salvage: The Judas Gambit" in Salvage Conquest: Tales from the Salvage Title Universe edited by Chris Kennedy and Kevin Steverson (October 2019, Theogony Books, ISBN978-1-950420-59-9)
"Secondhand Empires" in Trouble in the Wind edited by Chris Kennedy and James Young (December 2019, Theogony Books, ISBN978-1-950420-75-9)
"A Sword of Damocles" in Through the Gate: More Tales from the Salvage Title Universe edited by Chris Kennedy (June 2020, Theogony Books, ISBN978-1-64855-036-2)
"All Quiet on the Phantom Front" in Weird World War III edited by Sean Patrick Hazlett (October 2020, Baen Books, ISBN978-1-982124-91-5)
"Stowaway" in The Founder Effect edited by Robert E. Hampson and Sandra L. Medlock (December 2020, Baen Books, ISBN978-1-982125-09-7)
"Azchut" in The Expanding Universe: Volume 7 edited by Craig Martelle (September 2021, CMI, ISBN978-1-953062-20-8)
"The Eureka Alternative" in Weird World War IV edited by Sean Patrick Hazlett (March 2022, Baen Books, ISBN978-1-982125-96-7)
"The Pinocchio Gambit" in Robosoldiers: Thank You for Your Servos edited by Stephen Lawson (June 2022, Baen Books, ISBN978-1-982191-90-0)
Torgersen has been nominated for and won multiple awards for his various works. He is listed on Analog's Who's Who, a short listing of the "leading writers in the genre" who have been published in Analog.[23]