Ultimate Popsugar Reading Challenge discussion

3956 views
2018 Challenge Prompts - Regular > 27. A book set on a different planet

Comments Showing 101-150 of 178 (178 new)    post a comment »

message 101: by Mo (new)

Mo McCallie (minimod) | 22 comments Does anyone know if Carve the Mark would work for this prompt?


message 102: by Surra (new)

Surra | 1 comments Definitely going to read Iron Gold for this one! I loved the first three Red Rising books so much and met Pierce Brown twice. Amazing all around


message 103: by Lindsey (new)

Lindsey (lindseybo) | 30 comments Does under a never sky fit this prompt?


message 104: by Nadine in NY (new)

Nadine in NY Jones | 9680 comments Mod
Lindsey wrote: "Does under a never sky fit this prompt?"

No, Under a Never Sky is a dystopian set on Earth.


Mo wrote: "Does anyone know if Carve the Mark would work for this prompt?"

Yes, Carve the Mark is set on another planet.


message 105: by Grace (new)

Grace | 3 comments Would fantasy work for this category? I've been wanting to read Tad William's newest book


message 106: by David (new)


message 107: by Marianne (new)

Marianne CalamityMel | 3 comments I still don't know what i'm planning to read for this prompt, but I may highly recommande, as some of you did, Ursula Le Guin's book from the Earthsea series or the Hainish Cycle.
My favourite Le Guin's novel are :
The Dispossessed, the Left Hand of Darkness and A Wizard of Earthsea.


message 108: by Cornerofmadness (new)

Cornerofmadness | 805 comments Grace wrote: "Would fantasy work for this category? I've been wanting to read Tad William's newest book"

Personally I'd say yes.


message 109: by Stacy (new)

Stacy | 31 comments Chloe wrote: "I'm planning to read The Female Man by Joanna Russ

Railhead by Philip Reeve would also work, as would The Knife of Never Letting Go by Patrick Ness. [..."


I actually got on here to recommend The Knife of Never Letting Go (and the rest of the Chaos Walking series). Patrick Ness is one of my very favorite authors, and this series is perfect for the category!


message 110: by Rebecca (new)

Rebecca (yarninaround) Ronni wrote: "I'm a big sci-fi fan, so I won't have trouble checking off this category. I often recommend Remnant Population to people who don't read science fiction though and are interested in giv..."

Thanks for this, I'm not a fan of Sci-Fi and was trying to find something understable.


message 111: by Nadine in NY (new)

Nadine in NY Jones | 9680 comments Mod
Chloe wrote: "I'm planning to read The Female Man by Joanna Russ ..."

It's been a long time since I read The Female Man, but I remember it being set on Earth, just different versions of Earth (future earth, alternate-history Earth, etc)? I'm pretty sure "Whileaway" is Earth.


message 112: by Cornerofmadness (new)

Cornerofmadness | 805 comments Rebecca wrote: "Ronni wrote: "I'm a big sci-fi fan, so I won't have trouble checking off this category. I often recommend Remnant Population to people who don't read science fiction though and are int..."

There are plenty of Star Trek and Star Wars ones that would count toward this and are pretty much space opera, more action and pretty easy to relate to if that helps.


message 113: by Storm (new)

Storm | 60 comments I read The Graveyard Shift by Angela Roquet for this. It's not a real planet per se but it is a different world where she visits Earth sometimes so I'm counting it


message 114: by Liz (new)

Liz | 2 comments Would Terry Pratchett's "Discworld" count for this? I've never read them but I've bought the first one.


message 115: by Chinook (new)

Chinook | 731 comments Yes, absolutely. He described the world of the series in great detail.


message 116: by ~~*Julie (new)

~~*Julie Kawalec-pearson (jewel77) | 4 comments just finished Artemis by Andy Weir


message 117: by Agnès (new)

Agnès Denie Kristy wrote: "Isn’t there an Octavia Butler book on a different planet? Dawn maybe??

Red Rising is a great book!!"


I think you're referring to the Xenogenesis trilogy or Lilith's Brood .

No, it doesn't work for this prompt: they are re-populating Earth.


message 118: by Agnès (new)

Agnès Denie Carol wrote: "I don’t like sci-fi at all, but I’m determined to complete the prompts does anyone have a suggestion for me? Thanks"

Any part of the Vorkosigan Saga. They can be read more or less independently. You might miss some of the fun in watching a character grow up, but otherwise, the stories are pretty much self-contained.

She does romance pretty well, and her characters are very lively.


message 119: by Jake (new)

Jake Rocannon's World / Planet of Exile / City of Illusions / The Left Hand of Darkness Amzing book with interesting discussions about gender...in spaaaace!


message 120: by Agnès (new)

Agnès Denie Jake wrote: "Rocannon's World / Planet of Exile / City of Illusions / The Left Hand of Darkness Amzing book with interesting discussions about gender...in spaaaace!"

Seconded like WHOA!


message 121: by Amanda (new)

Amanda | 4 comments The Sparrow

I read The Sparrow and although it came to me highly recommended, it wasn't one of my favorite books. It was about a group of Jesuits that travel to the Planet they have named Rakhat to find the source of singing they picked up at a listening post in Puerto Rico for extraterrestrial life.


message 122: by Cyndy (new)

Cyndy (cyndy-ksreader) | 133 comments I so wanted to read a book set on Pluto... Oh well. :-)
I had sort of penciled in Red Rising for this category, but found a free book on Amazon kindle - probably only today 2/1.
The Shadow Order: A Space Opera by Michael Robertson


message 123: by Nadine in NY (new)

Nadine in NY Jones | 9680 comments Mod
Michelle wrote: "Any suggestions for someone who is not particularly a fan of sci-fi or fantasy? :\"

The Martian was great and seems to appeal to everyone, both sci-fi and non-sci-fi fans alike.


message 124: by Johanne (new)

Johanne *the biblionaut* | 1301 comments @Michelle, Hitchhikers guide to the galaxy takes place in space and different planets, and is comedy/ humour more than anything else. So if you haven't read that I'd recommend it.


message 126: by Kim (new)

Kim (kmyers) | 108 comments The Little Prince by Antoine De Saint-Exupery


message 127: by Candice (new)

Candice I read Children of Time for this prompt. It is probably the best sci-if book I’ve ever read!


message 128: by Jessica (new)

Jessica (jessicacaniglia) | 39 comments I just finished reading Semiosis and really enjoyed this character-driven novel.


message 129: by Cyndy (new)

Cyndy (cyndy-ksreader) | 133 comments I read The Little Prince by Antoine de Saint-Exupéry for this prompt. Interesting book. I can't say I think it would be good for kids, but it is a picture book of outer space with the prince bigger than the planet he lives on.
I may still read The Shadow Order: A Space Opera by Michael Robertson


message 130: by Nadine in NY (new)

Nadine in NY Jones | 9680 comments Mod
I'm reading Isaac Asimov's The Robots of Dawn. I had planned to re-read all of his Robots/Empire/Foundation books in "order," and this is book #3, and set on another planet, so voila! category will be fulfilled. Book #4 was a best-seller the year I graduated high school, so I've got that covered too.

But I'm becoming increasingly disgusted w/ Asimov's sexist attitude. I was willing to look past it in the earlier books, since he was young, and it was "a different time" (standard excuse), but Robots of Dawn was published in 1983, and Asimov was a full-grown adult, and he was well old enough to know better at that time. This sort of thing didn't jump out at me when I was a teenager, but now I'm feeling very crushed that one of my childhood heroes was actually a bigoted old creep, and I'm not sure if I can continue with my original plan to work my way through the full connected R/E/F series of novels.

I'm actually afraid to re-read the first three Foundation books. Teen-me gave them 5 stars. Am I going to hate them now????


message 131: by Casey (new)

Casey (mozambique) | 21 comments For this prompt I went with Dragon Ball Super Vol. 01 it definitely takes place in another world, plus it's great to dive back into the world of DBZ. It's been over 20 years since any new volumes have been released and I'm excited!


message 132: by Fannie (new)

Fannie D'Ascola | 438 comments Cyndy wrote: "I read The Little Prince by Antoine de Saint-Exupéry for this prompt. Interesting book. I can't say I think it would be good for kids, but it is a picture book of outer space with the..."

I beg to differ about the kids part. I always have the feling that this was a story to be read at any ages, but that you learn from it different things as you grow up. It's a great allegory about life.


message 133: by Cyndy (new)

Cyndy (cyndy-ksreader) | 133 comments Fannie wrote: "I beg to differ about the kids part. I always have the feling that this was a story to be read at any ages, but that you learn from it different things as you grow up. It's a great allegory about life. "

I'm sure lots of people will disagree with me. The reason I think so is (view spoiler)


message 134: by jbgbookgirl (last edited Mar 04, 2018 08:02PM) (new)

jbgbookgirl | 1 comments Would The Giver fit in this category?


message 135: by Christine (new)

Christine (christinem710) Hmm would 172 Hours on the Moon work for this? It tarts out on Earth but part of the setting includes the Moon.


message 136: by Carolina (new)

Carolina Poli (carolina_poli) | 29 comments I’m doing “Artemis” in audiobook version and it’s a lot do fun 😊


message 137: by Mike (new)

Mike | 443 comments Christine wrote: "Hmm would 172 Hours on the Moon work for this? It tarts out on Earth but part of the setting includes the Moon."

It's been pointed out before that the moon is not a planet. However, there are those who are stretching this prompt to include other celestial bodies. So it's up to you.


message 138: by Patricia (new)

Patricia (tricia_nelson) A Wrinkle in Time by Madeleine L'Engle - read this in preparation for seeing the movie. Fast read, and made me sad that I hadn't read this when I was younger. My kids didn't read this in school either.


message 139: by Cornerofmadness (new)

Cornerofmadness | 805 comments I just finished Skythane by J. Scott Coatsworth. It was very good, more space opera than hardcore SF (for those who might be leery of SF). Also it would count as LGBT.


message 140: by Linda (new)

Linda Varick-cooper | 20 comments I read Artemis as my book about a heist.

It, and other books about the moon will only fulfill this category if you decide to change the wording of it like JoAnna did.

As I just finished teaching my second grade students, the moon is NOT a planet.

Even a book set on Earth would make more sense... Then you'd just be discussing how one would define the word "different". The word "planet" has a very clear definition.


message 141: by Ian (new)

Ian (iansreads) I read the Hugo-award winning novella Binti by Nnidi Okorafor. This was great and I can't wait to finish the trilogy when I get done with this year's challenge.


message 142: by Therese (new)

Therese | 133 comments I hope someone will tell me that The Martian get better. I started it yesterday, but all the science and space stuff is over my head. (I am more at home in medieval England or any place for historical fiction takes place.) This is definitely not my category, but at least I will watch the movie when I have finished.


message 143: by Abbie (new)

Abbie (abbienormal21) | 91 comments Does anyone know if Space Opera would work for this category? I can't tell if any of it actually takes place on another planet, although I'm assuming yes.


message 144: by Liz (new)

Liz | 3 comments Dan wrote: "Mary-jo wrote: "Would Game of Thrones; A Song of Ice and Fire by George R.R. Martin count for this prompt?"

Are you sure? I think you could say Lord of the Rings is set on Earth, but I always assu..."


My husband and I were having this discussion today. He is a huge GoT fan and sent me this quote he found:

Author George R.R. Martin has stated that his fictional universe is meant to be a completely alternate and separate world not linked to our own in any way,


message 145: by Kim (new)

Kim Williamson | 50 comments I think I’m using Artemis for this. I know a lot of you are in the moon doesn’t qualify for this prompt camp but I just finished reading the book and it doesn’t qualify technically as a heist either as a robbery was never part of the plot.


message 146: by Dani (new)

Dani Beckman | 4 comments So that is an awesome quote as I am on book 4 just this year! And was wondering what I was going to do for a book set on another planet, but I can just use the next in the series I suppose - it does seem surreal sometimes the way they speak and we obviously know those lands do not exist anywhere here..... thanks Liz!


message 147: by Teri (new)

Teri (teria) | 1554 comments Any of the books in Brandon Mull's "The Five Kingdoms" series works well for this category and is a fantasy middle-school read. I used the final book Time Jumpers for this category. The series is about some middle school age children that are kidnapped from Earth and taken to another planet as slaves and how they survive and thrive in a magical land.


message 148: by Jess (new)

Jess Penhallow | 427 comments My choice for this challenge has changed since finding a very old edition of A Princess of Mars in a holiday cottage I am staying in. This edition was printed in 1920, 8 years after original publication.


message 149: by Cornerofmadness (new)

Cornerofmadness | 805 comments Jess wrote: "My choice for this challenge has changed since finding a very old edition of A Princess of Mars in a holiday cottage I am staying in. This edition was printed in 1920, 8 years after or..."

That is so cool.


message 150: by Kimberly (new)

Kimberly | 5 comments Would Neal Stephenson’s Seveneves count?


back to top