http://rickwilber.com/dellaward.htmIn case you don't want to read through the opening paragraphs linked there -- it's a national award for college undergraduate science fiction/fantasy writers. I placed second!
I got an honorable mention last year, so this is a big step up. Since the judges include at least one important editor, this represents more progress towards publication. I'm pretty excited.
My entry, 'Hypocrite', was a hard science fiction story about the crew of an AI-hunting ship,
Mishanni. One of the ship's combat teams ends up in a dangerous situation -- trapped on a station near the active star DX Cancri during a solar flare. Their only chance of survival is to upload brainscan backups to a computer substrate. But the only available computer is already running a program: three simulated human infants, grown in sensory deprivation as a philosophical experiment by a rogue individual.
The team members have to decide whether to destroy the infants in order to to save themselves. Conflict results. The story explores themes regarding the humanity of AIs and uploaded human intelligences.
There was some cool military tech involved in the story, including some explorations of powered armor, a fairly realistic kind of interstellar warfare (no faster-than-light travel), and the role of cyborg augmentations in a society that extols the purity of the human body (they've created an order of special-purpose cyborgs called Hypocrites, who are viewed as necessary but subhuman.)