You'll love this one...!! A book club & more discussion
Challenges: Monthly
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May 2013 Challenge - Don't Forget Your Towel

Check Cherie's shelves, Marnie. We have a lot of books in commun but our ratings are not the same.


Hey, Ann, this one looks good. Did you see that is # 2 of maybe a series, not that it really matters. I see that Tejas Janet has read it. She gave it lots of stars.

Thanks Cherie; I will check those titles out.

I've also hear Asimov referred to as Hard Scifi. I mean, robots written in the 50s. Classic stuff. He'..."
I agree. I consider him pretty much Hard Scifi. The Caves of Steel is a great story about a kind of dystopyan futue where they create this positronic brain. He has several books that have this same theme linking robot brains with humans.

I was in an girls only private school so I had the SF shelves pretty much to myself. :)
I took me a while to find a genre I had not explored to much.


Hey, Ann, this one looks good. D..."
The 1st is Doomsday Book. Both have a different tone. It's been years but I remember to To Say Nothing of the Dog as a really fun read. And I just discovered there are new ones... Yippee!

You wanta close your eyes and pick one from this genere for me to read too? The titles make me cringe, but I love Rusalka's badges.

You wanta close your eyes and pick one from this genere for me to rea..."
You noticed the titles too, huh? :) i was glad to find Miéville in there, one I was going to read eventually. I am clueless in that genre.

You wanta close your eyes and pick one from this gener..."
Okay, I found one of his others that fits. I guess I will give Un Lun Dun a try for Steampunk.

And if you don't mind more steam and less punk and a sprinkling of fantasy, Soulless is fun but right on the precipice of falling into fantasy proper. That's where I think you guys came in. Romance books with either fantasy elements and/or dirigibles.
Esther wrote: "(Wow. Something ate the post I just wrote....) So after a bit of research, I found a genre : steampunk. I am thinking of Perdido Street Station that seems to fit the genre.
Miéville have been on ..."
I've read that as well. IIRC it's a but hefty and I thought it very good, but can;t say it's a place I'd want to visit.
Miéville have been on ..."
I've read that as well. IIRC it's a but hefty and I thought it very good, but can;t say it's a place I'd want to visit.

I rarely read sci-fi, and when I do I guess you'd call it dystopia? 1984, Brave New World, Oryx and Crake, A Clockwork Orange are about the extent of my SF exposure.
I'd really like to read Solaris for this challenge. I think the genre is space travel perhaps? What do you all think -- is it far enough out of my comfort zone?

Edit: Solaris could be considered hard scifi too I'm sure.

Thanks Rusalka :)
I <3 Firely too!

Lynn wrote: "I <3 Firely too! ..."
I'm very fond of the series and movie. I actually rotate it through my Netflix queue constantly. Watch it, put it at the bottom of the list of movies and then let it rise naturally to the top for another viewing.
Nathan Fillion never hurts my eyes!


I rarely read sci-fi, and when I do I guess you'd call it dystopia? 1984, Brave New World,..."
Hi Michelle. I had to look up steampump too! It is pretty out of my comfort zone, but about the only place I had to go for this challenge. I have not read the book you have chosen, but I marked it TBR. I think it sounds like a pretty interesting story! That guy on the cover looks like George Clooney, can't beat that either!

There are no blueberries in those cookies! Aren't you glad that you don't have to bribe me? Well, this time, anyway!

I've read the first book in the 4 part series so it won't count :(
I could go with Social/Soft SciFi -
Fahrenheit 451 as never read soft scifi before.
or superhuman - The Angel Experiment
Loving looking up and looking into what to read :)

I'll read The Time Machinefor time travel sub genre.
OK, decision made. Based solely on what was in the library I am going to read:
Foundation by Isaac Asimov, which I surmise is hard SciFi or Space opera.
and The Man in the High Castle by Philip K. Dick which is alternative history.
Don't recall reading anything remotely like either of those before, so hopefully that passes the meanie test. I think my idea of what SciFi is might be rather narrow compared to the range that the genre actually encompasses.
Foundation by Isaac Asimov, which I surmise is hard SciFi or Space opera.
and The Man in the High Castle by Philip K. Dick which is alternative history.
Don't recall reading anything remotely like either of those before, so hopefully that passes the meanie test. I think my idea of what SciFi is might be rather narrow compared to the range that the genre actually encompasses.

I don't think that I have read 'steampunk' before and have Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea on my TBR so let's go with that.

Emily - sounds great! It's on my TBR too.

My library has it and it's on a Goodreads list as Steampunk which I have never read before.. So I'm changing books.

Love it though.


My library has it and it's on a Goodreads list as Steampunk which I have never read before.. So I'm changing books."
I would call it alternate history.

My library has it and it's on a Goodreads list as Steampunk which I have never read before.. So I'm changing books."
I would call it alternate history."
Thanks Almeta, I was about to invoke your name :P

My library has it and it's on a Goodreads list as Steampunk which I have never read before.. So I'm changing books."
I would call it alternate history."
It is a hard one. alternate history works for me. Unless there is a funny and weird genre. :)

I have Flowers for Algernon as a back up which I think is soft science fiction and I have never read The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy so I have some back ups.

Also, throwing this open to the group. I'm having a really hard time classifying The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy which I really should have bloody thought about before making this thread.
Anyways, thoughts on a comic/social commentary subgenre? This could encompass The Eyre Affair and Year Zero which could fall into this genre? I am thinking as I FINALLY go to bed. Decisions tomorrow.


My library has it and it's on a Goodreads list as Steampunk which I have never read before.. So I'm changing books."
I would call it alternate history."
Thanks Almeta, I was about to invoke your name :P ..."
When I think nof SteamPunk I envision Victorian people with computers run by steam. Great ruffled costumes (men and women), high-heeled boots, awesome technical gadgets, but no electricity. Airborn and Phoenix Rising are Steampunk.
Not all "Thursday Next's adventures are Alternate History, but this one is, in its own weird way.
SciFi Humor would be a better category overall. (for Hitchhiker’s Guide also). It is also fantasy, but not in that fairy way, more in the Doctor Who way.
I forgot about having read Douglas Adams.
I'm a person who says that I don’t read SciFi; I must be in denial!☻

Another alternative history example is Guns of the South where men from South Africa time travel back to the Civil War with the intent to change the outcome of the Civil War.

So, here are a couple of genres that are left: steampunk or dieselpunk as well as alternate history.
I will look up during the weekend to determine whether I can put my hand on a book:

It's another option that I like but the option of soft sci fi isn't open for me.


For steampunk:
The Strange Affair of Spring Heeled Jack
Phoenix Rising
For alternate history
Darwinia
The Man in the High Castle
The Plot Against America
What do you think?

So, I'm thinking I may have to go with Cyberpunk (Cinder), or Military Sci-Fi (Starship Troopers). I shall ponder some more.

Here's the list:
Hard SciFi.......... Social/Soft SciFi.......... Cyberpunk.......... Time Travel.......... Alternate History..........Military SciFi.......... Steampunk.......... Superhuman.......... Apocalyptic.......... Space Opera.......... Biopunk.......... Space Western.......... Dystopian.......... Dieselpunk
The only one I've not read before is "dieselpunk" which, according to the wiki links, consists of graphic novels associated with video games.
I'm currently reading 2312 by Kim Stanley Robinson, which is Hard SciFi, and a collection of novelettes smoothed into a novel Regenesis by Julia Ecklar (author: E) which is Biopunk or Hard SciFi (our heroine is a zoologist working for an organization called "Noah's Ark"). Both books are good reads, although 2312 will take extra patience to get into if you're a novice reader of Hard SciFi.
Books mentioned in this topic
The Time Machine (other topics)Cinder (other topics)
11/22/63 (other topics)
11/22/63 (other topics)
The Martian Chronicles (other topics)
More...
Authors mentioned in this topic
Arthur C. Clarke (other topics)Isaac Asimov (other topics)
Isaac Asimov (other topics)
Ray Bradbury (other topics)
Robert A. Heinlein (other topics)
More...
I've also hear Asimov referred to as Hard Scifi. I mean, robots written in the 50s. Classic stuff. He's one of the guys I think of as hard scifi along with Arthur C Clarke and such. What you think Cherie (I've been waiting for you to pop in with your knowledge :P)