The Sword and Laser discussion
When did you know that SciFi and Fantasy was the genre for you
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Daniel
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Sep 04, 2013 02:22PM

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Before that book, for the most part my reading was geared towards literary, folklore, and mythology. Couple my reading of "The Time Machine", "Around the World in 80 Days", and "War of the Worlds" with my love of shows like "Star Trek" and "Cleopatra 2525" and it was a done deal.

"When did you stop?"
Most of the children's stories I grew up on had fantastical elements - from the wicked witches of fairy tales to the Hobbit to Roald Dahl and, at middle school, I was a huge fantasy nerd - all the writers coming to the fore in the 80s like David Eddings and Terry Brooks, and discovering older writers such as T.H. White, Lloyd Alexander, Tanith Lee and, of course, Tolkien.
In my teens I switched to more SF, initially through a bunch of old paperbacks of my dad's - E.E. 'Doc' Smith and AE van Vogt, and the planetary romances of Burroughs and Leigh Brackett, then working through the pantheon - Asimov, Clarke, Pohl, etc.

I found some conan type stuff but never really thought I liked Fantasy I just knew I was fascinated by swordfights and Dragons and liked The D&D cartoon, then record of Lodoss war and it kind of just snuck up on me very slowly with fantasy.


Thats me almost exactly except replace Eragon with
The Dark Elf Trilogy Collector's Edition and 6th grade with age 27!
Couldn't stand reading, now I feel ALL twitchy if I don't already have my NEXT book picked out :p





The other was "Dragonsinger" by McCaffery... I think I had a serious crush on the master harper. The last book was so sad.

The only fantasy I can remember reading before college was The Hobbit (for 9th grade English) and the first four The Dark Tower books.
The only real Sci-Fi I remember was 2001: A Space Odyssey. There may have been others, but I tended to read more of a variety.
In college I finally read Lord of Rings before the first movie came out, and slowly I started reading other stuff.
Sadly it's all sort of a blur now, and I don't have any real idea.
The only real Sci-Fi I remember was 2001: A Space Odyssey. There may have been others, but I tended to read more of a variety.
In college I finally read Lord of Rings before the first movie came out, and slowly I started reading other stuff.
Sadly it's all sort of a blur now, and I don't have any real idea.



This. A Spell for Chameleon ruined me for anything but SFF.



Stuart wrote: "Hard to say, but it might have been the reading of "The Lion the Witch and The Wardrobe" when I was about eight."
Oh yeah. I read at least that and I think some of the other Narnia books as a kid. I also read a lot of the Wizard of Oz books.
Oh yeah. I read at least that and I think some of the other Narnia books as a kid. I also read a lot of the Wizard of Oz books.



Seeing the magic of a fantasy world set in a world that could be and was grounded somewhat in reality blew my mind.

My brother was away at college, so being the nosy little sister that I (still) am, I went into his room, saw this book with a cool looking dragon on the front, and the rest was history.


Time Enough for Love, by Robert Heinlein drew me to SciFi, not long after LOTR.
Kim Harrison's Rachel Morgan series addicted me the Urban Fantasy novels about 6-7 years ago.

Honestly, I don't know how anyone my age could have avoided becoming a science fiction fan. It was such an influential part of Sixties culture.

A wrinkle in Time was also one of my childhood books.



Lord Foul's Banewas the first,I then had to finish the Thomas Covenant series.But I was still in high school so it must have been between 1979-1982.
Books mentioned in this topic
Lord Foul's Bane (other topics)D'Aulaires' Book of Greek Myths (other topics)
The White Mountains (other topics)
The Book of Three (other topics)
Red Planet (other topics)
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Authors mentioned in this topic
Katharine Kerr (other topics)China Miéville (other topics)
T.H. White (other topics)
David Eddings (other topics)
Terry Brooks (other topics)
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