Critic
John Clute has written that Chiang's work has a "tight-hewn and lucid style... [which] has a magnetic effect on the reader". Critic and poet
Joyce Carol Oates wrote that Chiang explores "conventional tropes of science fiction in highly unconventional ways" in "teasing, tormenting, illuminating, thrilling" fashion, comparing him favorably to
Philip K. Dick,
James Tiptree Jr. and
Jorge Luis Borges. Writer
Peter Watts has praised Chiang's work, writing: "We share a secret prayer, we writers of short
SF. We utter it whenever one of our stories is about to appear in public, and it goes like this:
Please, Lord. Please, if it be Thy will, don’t let Ted Chiang publish a story this year." Former US president
Barack Obama included Chiang's short story collection
Exhalation in his 2019 reading list, praising it as the "best kind of science fiction".
Awards Ted Chiang has won or been nominated for several awards for several of his works. Chiang turned down a Hugo nomination for his short story "
Liking What You See: A Documentary" in 2003, on the grounds that the story was rushed due to editorial pressure and did not turn out as he had really wanted. Chiang was inducted into the Science Fiction and Fantasy Hall of Fame in 2020. In 2024, Chiang won the
PEN/Malamud Award for "excellence in the art of the short story" and the
American Humanist Association's Inquiry and Innovation Award. ==Personal life==