SciFi and Fantasy Book Club discussion
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July Sci-Fi Book *Please See Posts#1-#14-#26*
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Me too.

Anyway, scrolling through all these very excellent nominations, I heartily second Fahrenheit 451, for what it's worth. That books is so wonderful it haunts me to this day. Would love to read it again.
But then, everything mentioned sounds real exciting!

Lara Amber

The current members of next week's poll:
Oryx and Crake by Margaret Atwood
Cloud Atlas by David Mitchell
The Sparrow by Mary Doria Russell
Frankenstein by Mary Shelley
Engine Summer by John Crowley
Cat's Cradle by Kurt Vonnegut
Concrete Island by J.G. Ballard
The Yiddish Policeman's Union by Michael Chabon
Out of the Silent Planet by C.S. Lewis
Never Let Me Go by Kazuo Ishiguro
The Left Hand of Darkness by Ursula K. LeGuin
Fahrenheit 451 by Ray Bradbury
Gun with Occasional Music by Jonathan Lethem
A Clockwork Orange by Anthony Burgess
The Demolished Man by Alfred Bester

Lara Amber


I'd like to second :
Gun, with Occasional Music by Jonathan Lethem. A book I think would create diverse reactions from the group. A Marmite book you could say.
A Clockwork Orange by Anthony Burgess about as inventive and stylistic as they come.
The Demolished Man by Alfred Bester. Might be a bit dated now, but its use of novel stylistic methods I think could get it on this list.
Good idea of semi and finals. Makes me feel less guilty for seconding so many books.



I think you cannot add Bester and exclude other pure science fiction writers.
I have been thinking more about this subject and would add
Frankenstein by Mary Shelley.
20,000 Leagues under the Sea by Jules Verne.

I tend to agree with you on both Russell and Bester, Jeffrey, but the one difference in Russell's favour here is that she tends to attract many folks who would never pick up another Sci-Fi book -- "maiden aunts" (tip of the hat to Manny), mom-in-laws and snobby boys deep in their Proust.
Verne is a good pick. I hope someone seconds. Frankenstein is already on the list.

I think that in the case of The Sparrow, it is the author that transcends the science fiction genre.
Brad, while I really like the idea of a poll and then a run-off poll (which another one of my groups has been doing for a long while and it works really well), please don't make each poll be for too short of a time period - perhaps 5 days? (instead of 3)?
I ask because I'm not on the computer weekends or nights (usually), so I'd hate to cut it so short that some folks miss the window to vote...

Okee Doke. I can do that, Carolyn. 5 days it is. But if I'm not able to find a moderator for the discussion I may come hunting you down ;)

After much thought, and taking Jeffrey's concerns into account, I killed Bester's The Demolished Man, and I seconded The Wind-up Bird Chronicle to replace it with. Just thought y'all'd like to know.

BTW, I am still not entirely sure what the exact criteria is here so can someone clarify?
A) Someone who is mostly known for highly respected mainstream literature but has also written one or more 'good' SF books
B) Someone who is mostly known for 'good' mainstream books but has also written a 'classic' SF book
C) Someone who is mostly known for 'good' SF but has written a classic mainstream book
D) Someone who has written at least one classic book in both the mainstream & SF Genres


Ok so that would be '1984' and 'Frankenstein' & 'Clockwork Orange' (also Verne & Wells) but not any of the others on the shortlist. The non-SF reading "general public" would not have heard of any of the others with the possible exception of 'Fahrenheit 451' and then only if they are film buffs who know their obscure stuff. Also, much as I love some of them, I could not honestly say any of those remaining have had any cultural impact beyond SF.
I am still confused (and I suspect people are bending the rules just to nominate books they want to read):-)

Good as .Oryx and Crake is surely The Handmaid's Tale is the Atwood novel that the public is most likely to know. And as a nominee for both Booker & Nebula awards it definitely meets the criteria

You forgot to mention The Left Hand of Darkness, Robinhj, which is an important text in Gender Studies and is widely studied in colleges and universities across North America.
Vonnegut's work, as a whole, has had significant cultural influence beyond Sci-Fi, so any of his better works qualify (and Cat's Cradle was the first nominated, so it got the nod). Crowley has been canonized by none other than Harold Bloom, validating the choice of Engine Summer. And as for Oryx and Crake...well, surely the fact that it was short listed for the Booker Prize makes it a strong enough candidate for our list no matter your preference for The Handmaid's Tale.
Also, Robinhj wrote: "I am still confused (and I suspect people are bending the rules just to nominate books they want to read):-)..."
The only person who could possibly be bending the rules is myself, since I made the rules and am in charge of the poll, so your witticism has been noticed by the intended eyes. I am confident, however, that I didn't bend my own rules for any of the books on the list (with the possible exception of The Sparrow, which I believe a convincing enough case can be made for).
Regardless, the list is complete and the voting is on. We'll all simply have to make due with the outcome.


No problem. I think it was the 'General Public' clause that I was struggling with because my vision of 'General Public' is made up mostly of people who think 'Harry Potter' is the pinnacle of literature :-) If I replace 'General Public' with 'mainstream literary critics' it all fits OK. Besides, I am also a big fan of 'The Sparrow' so why would I argue? :-p
Books mentioned in this topic
The Holy Bible: King James Version (other topics)The Handmaid’s Tale (other topics)
The Sparrow (other topics)
Oryx and Crake (other topics)
Cat’s Cradle (other topics)
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Authors mentioned in this topic
Anthony Burgess (other topics)Alfred Bester (other topics)
Jonathan Lethem (other topics)
Alfred Bester (other topics)
Anthony Burgess (other topics)
More...
Well stated Brad - I think that clarifies the theme. So many books fit in multiple genres that it can be hard to make these determinations, but to me, Literary Sci-Fi would be either (1) an established literary author who has published a SciFi work or (2) a SciFi author whose work is so well regarded and that it has crossed over into the genre of general fiction literature. And while “literary” is by definition a broad term, I think we’ve all read enough to know what qualifies as literary as opposed to pulp fiction (which, for the record, I love just as much as the “literary” stuff)