SciFi and Fantasy Book Club discussion

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Members' Chat > Top 12 all-time SFF books

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message 101: by Valerie (new)

Valerie (darthval) | 781 comments Monica wrote: "Oryx an Crake is definitely divisive. Folks either love it or hate it. For me it was just brilliant and I admit, it took me a few weeks away from the book to recognize that. But I found it to be on..."

I felt the same. It crept up on me and the more I would reflect, the more I liked it.


message 102: by Anthony (new)

Anthony (albinokid) | 1478 comments Hank wrote: "Was that sigh from the air leaking out of your lungs because the book dead tree dropped on your chest? ;)"

Partly that, and partly mimicking his characters, who *all* sigh. A lot. And I mean *all* of them. All. The. Time..


message 103: by Jemppu (last edited Oct 30, 2019 03:41PM) (new)

Jemppu | 1735 comments Anthony wrote: "...And last bit certainly not least...that book in your number 1 spot...?

Sigh."


*hah* How many were they again?

(Disclaimer: I actually did enjoy the book, but also recognize the complaints).


message 104: by Valerie (new)

Valerie (darthval) | 781 comments Anthony wrote: "Hank wrote: "Was that sigh from the air leaking out of your lungs because the book dead tree dropped on your chest? ;)"

Partly that, and partly mimicking his characters, who *all* sigh. A lot. And..."


Maybe that is just the sighn of a great character. Sigh.


message 105: by Meredith (new)

Meredith | 1775 comments What a fun challenge. My list has both early or formative reads for me and more recent reads which had a big impact on me. In 6 months or a year, some books will certainly still be on this list, but some could easily be shifted off by new reads (like those on folk's lists above!). It was hard to narrow things down, that's for sure.

(in no particular order)

The Hobbit or There and Back Again
The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy series
To Say Nothing of the Dog (my first Connie Willis)
Neverwhere (my first Neil Gaiman)
Ancillary Justice and rest of series
The Fifth Season and the rest of the series
Ender's Game
The Lies of Locke Lamora
Rosemary and Rue (and the others I've read so far in this series)
Perdido Street Station/The Scar (I haven't read Iron Council yet)
Ammonite
Dreamsnake


message 106: by Anthony (new)

Anthony (albinokid) | 1478 comments @Gabi or Anna, since you seem to be the most numbers-oriented, spreadsheety, organized among us, would you care to total up the top mentioned books including and then beyond the three that were highlighted earlier?


message 107: by Cheryl (new)

Cheryl (cherylllr) Anthony wrote: "@Gabi or Anna, since you seem to be the most numbers-oriented, spreadsheety, organized among us, would you care to total up the top mentioned books including and then beyond the three that were hig..."

I'd like to see that, too, but not yet! I'm sure I'm not the only person dragging heels....


message 108: by Eva (new)

Eva | 968 comments I really like Way of Kings, but you're right: there are 141 sighs in this novel!!
That's almost as many rapes as in SoIaF... Personally, I'm less bothered by people sighing a lot than raping/getting raped a lot in my books. :D But he should definitely tone it down with the sighing.


message 109: by Jemppu (last edited Oct 30, 2019 09:17PM) (new)

Jemppu | 1735 comments Mind if I (a sleepless night). The tally thus far:

IIIIIIIIII - The Fifth Season / The Broken Earth
IIIIII - The Dispossessed
IIIII - The Left Hand of Darkness
IIIII - Perdido Street Station
IIIII - Too Like the Lightning (Terra Ignota)
IIIII - All Systems Red / Murderbot Diaries
IIIII - Ancillary Justice
IIII - Assassin's Apprentice / The Farseer Trilogy
IIII - Children of Time
IIII - Hyperion (Cantos)
IIII - Parable of the Sower
IIII - The Way of Kings
IIII - Red Mars / Green Mars / Mars Trilogy
IIII - The Martian
IIII - Dune
IIII - The Handmaid's Tale
III - Doomsday Book
III - Tigana
III - His Dark Materials
III - A Wizard of Earthsea / Earthsea
III - A Closed and Common Orbit
III - The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy
III - The Lord of the Rings
III - Ready Player One
III - Dreamsnake
III - Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban
II - All the Birds in the Sky
II - The Calculating Stars
II - Downbelow Station
II - Tehanu
II - Small Gods
II - The Cloud Roads (Raksura)
II - Dawn (Xenogenesis)
II - The Sparrow
II - Oryx and Crake
II - Wool Omnibus
II - Childhood's End
II - A Song of Ice and Fire / Game of Thrones
II - Ender's Game
II - The Forever War
II - 1984
II - Snow Crash
II - The Last Unicorn
II - Jonathan Strange & Mr Norrell
II - The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe
II - Ammonite
II - The Night Circus
II - Neverwhere

The once mentioned: (view spoiler)


message 110: by Anthony (new)

Anthony (albinokid) | 1478 comments Wow, thank you!!!


message 111: by Wen (new)

Wen | 401 comments Thank you! and your beauty sleep time!!!


message 112: by Anthony (new)

Anthony (albinokid) | 1478 comments Eva wrote: "I really like Way of Kings, but you're right: there are 141 sighs in this novel!!
That's almost as many rapes as in SoIaF... Personally, I'm less bothered by people sighing a lot than raping/getti..."


There are far more than 141. I did a search at one point and it averages to a sigh every four pages or so.

Not to mention the prevalence of one-eyebrow raises and eye rolls.

I mean all of those behaviors are repeated over and over and over by just about every character. Don’t get me wrong, there are some very cool things in the book. But man does it need a more attentive and aggressive editor.


message 113: by Eva (new)

Eva | 968 comments Yes, you're right about needing a more attentive editor - I think many very successful authors seem to get edited much more sparingly with their success and it hurts their prose.

But the 141 results was from a kindle search in the book (of "sigh") and I do think that's a lot. And it doesn't improve in the sequels! I'm astonished that I never noticed it.


message 114: by Trike (new)

Trike Eva wrote: "But the 141 results was from a kindle search in the book (of "sigh") and I do think that's a lot."

I just did a search on “sighed” and it returned 247 hits. “Sigh” returns “sighted” and “insight”, but boy it’s a hecka lot.


message 115: by Meredith (new)

Meredith | 1775 comments Jemppu wrote: "Mind if I (a sleepless night). The tally thus far:
...


Thank you Jemppu!


message 116: by Jemppu (new)

Jemppu | 1735 comments Anthony wrote: "...I mean all of those behaviors are repeated over and over and over by just about every character. Don’t get me wrong, there are some very cool things in the book. But man does it need a more attentive and aggressive editor...."

You were not bothered by the 360 or so "starts" in Blackout / All Clear? ;) Those stood out to me in terms of repeated words, which might've used some selective editing.


message 117: by Anthony (new)

Anthony (albinokid) | 1478 comments I didn’t notice it, no. Perhaps because I’m an actor, I pay closer attention to how characters’ behavior is depicted than other possibly repetitious aspects of the prose.


message 118: by Gabi (new)

Gabi | 3441 comments Oh great, I wake up and this thread turned into another hate-Way-of-the-Kings lament ... ^^'


message 120: by Jemppu (last edited Oct 30, 2019 10:29PM) (new)

Jemppu | 1735 comments Anthony wrote: "I didn’t notice it, no. Perhaps because I’m an actor, I pay closer attention to how characters’ behavior is depicted than other possibly repetitious aspects of the prose."

Where as my daily tasks often include cutting out exactly the sort of repetitions in text. Those characters starting up and starting down, starting across and along, starting in and starting out, starting left and right... would've not necessarily made the cut ^^'

That said: I did not pay attention to the sighs and eyebrow raises in the Way of Kings until you pointed them out. I'm certain, that the level of engagement one has with the story has a lot to do with how much one has mind to get distracted with such peculiarities in prose, too.


message 121: by Anthony (new)

Anthony (albinokid) | 1478 comments @Gabi I’m truly sorry that’s your impression. I don’t hate it, nor have I said that I do.


message 122: by Jemppu (new)

Jemppu | 1735 comments @Gabi, no hating on anything ^^ Just a bit of (over)analyzing? *hah*


message 123: by Gabi (new)

Gabi | 3441 comments Anthony wrote: "@Gabi I’m truly sorry that’s your impression. I don’t hate it, nor have I said that I do."

All well! I just wasn't expecting it when I opened the thread. Guess I would have needed a CW.


message 124: by DivaDiane (new)

DivaDiane SM | 3675 comments Oh, I hadn’t noticed all the sighing in Way of King’s. But I will now. Sigh.

I listened to Wil Wheaton narrate John Scalzi’s Redshirts and was completely distracted by all the He said/she saids. It was literally for every single speech. Scallions said, if he could redo that one he’d cut out a goodly number. When eye-reading you automatically skip over stuff like that but you can’t in audio.


message 125: by Anna (new)

Anna (vegfic) | 10434 comments This is an interesting discussion, maybe someone wants to start a thread about things that drive you nuts in books? So we can get back to everyone's top 12 SFF books!


message 126: by DivaDiane (new)

DivaDiane SM | 3675 comments You are such a task master, Anna! 😏😄


message 127: by Anthony (new)

Anthony (albinokid) | 1478 comments Can I just take a moment, though, Anna, to delight in the auto correcting of Scalzi to Scallions?


message 128: by Jemppu (new)

Jemppu | 1735 comments *heeheehee*


message 129: by Melani (new)

Melani | 145 comments CBRetriever wrote: "sorry, I was just hoping to get more of a what books really changed/impacted you or deeply moved you and not just favorite books. Some of my favorites are none of the above but i love them anyway"

My list is both. A book doesn't make a favorite for me if it doesn't somehow move me, or open up a new world. These aren't just books I enjoyed, they're books I love. Because they moved me or introduced me to a new world.


message 130: by Trike (new)

Trike Anthony wrote: "Can I just take a moment, though, Anna, to delight in the auto correcting of Scalzi to Scallions?"

https://youtu.be/_bpS-cOBK6Q


message 131: by Cheryl (last edited Oct 31, 2019 07:11AM) (new)

Cheryl (cherylllr) Ok, I've mulled this over long enough. Atm, this is my offer:

My list of personal favorites that I reread (and recommend) still because they give more to me each time I do:

Fahrenheit 451 and a few others Ray Bradbury
Way Station and others Clifford D. Simak
Asimov's Robot stories
A Long Way to a Small Angry Planet and sequels
From These Ashes Fredric Brown
The Kin Peter Dickinson
The Princess and the Goblin & others George MacDonald

These I have reread in the past because they offered more to me back then:

The Host Stephenie Meyer
Frankenstein
Flowers for Algernon
Replay Ken Grimwood
Station Eleven Emily St. John Mandel
Wrinkle in Time

These I love & would reread given another Group Read & would recommend:

Children of Time
China Mountain Zhang
The Martian
Trading in Danger and sequels
The Giver
Fledgling

Used to like, feel moved & inspired by, I have to admit:

Stranger in a Strange Land
Animorphs (yes, I was an adult at the time I read them, but part of my appreciation for them was watching my kids enjoy them)


message 132: by DivaDiane (new)

DivaDiane SM | 3675 comments I seem to have an issue with auto correct lately. And Trike also seems to delight in them: Way of Kong’s and Scalzi/Scallions. Glad my posts are so chuckle worthy.


message 133: by Ruth (new)

Ruth | 170 comments Diane wrote: "Oh, I hadn’t noticed all the sighing in Way of King’s. But I will now. Sigh.

I listened to Wil Wheaton narrate John Scalzi’s Redshirts and was completely distracted by all the He said/she saids. ..."


I found the exact same thing! I was surprised that Wheaton didn’t ask Spring Onions to edit a few of them out.


message 134: by Anna (last edited Oct 31, 2019 10:30AM) (new)

Anna (vegfic) | 10434 comments Scallions and hellions and everyone else who wants to continue this delightful discussion, please move on over to the thread Beth kindly started! :)

https://www.goodreads.com/topic/show/...


message 135: by Jemppu (last edited Oct 31, 2019 10:25AM) (new)

Jemppu | 1735 comments Anna wrote: "Scallions and hellions and everyone else who wants to continue this delightful discussion, please move on over to the thread Beth kindly started! :) ..."

*psst* Anna, you might want to fix the link - it goes to the Halloween discussion ^^'


message 136: by Anna (new)

Anna (vegfic) | 10434 comments lol, too many tabs open :D Fixed!


message 137: by Jemppu (new)

Jemppu | 1735 comments 👍 most familiar occurrence ^^


message 138: by Leticia (new)

Leticia (leticiatoraci) Jemppu wrote: "Mind if I (a sleepless night). The tally thus far:

IIIIIIIIII - The Fifth Season / The Broken Earth
IIIIII - The Dispossessed
IIIII - [book:The Left Hand of Darkness|1..."


Great! That's a list to investigate further!


message 139: by Glynis (new)

Glynis | 29 comments Oh this was hard – my first list was 18 – what was hard was refining it to 12!

Gene wolf – the Book of the New Sun
Kim Stanley Robinson – New York 2140
Mervyn Peake – Titus Groan
Neal Stephenson – The Diamond Age
Ursula Le Guin –The Left Hand of Darkness
Margaret Atwood – The Oryx and Crake series
Neil Gaiman – Coraline
N K Jeminson –The Fifth Season
Paul McCauley – The Quiet War series
M R Carey – The Girl with all the Gifts
Maureen F McHugh – China Mountain Zhang
Cory Doctorow – Walkaway

I really wanted to include books by Delaney and Ballard but couldn’t come up with an individual title!

Anyway this is just for now – I can change my mind tomorrow.


message 140: by Anthony (new)

Anthony (albinokid) | 1478 comments @Glynis you’re the only person I know who’s read NY 2140. Im looking forward to reading that myself, as scary as it might be, being a New Yorker, to imagine the scenario depicted in that book. Our mayor just announced an ambitious plan to combat water levels, and hopefully that plan, or something like it, will get passed and implemented.

Always happy to see love given to The Book of the New Sun, which is one of the more fascinating series I’ve ever read.

I haven’t yet read any Cory Doctorow, but I do have a couple of his books, although I haven’t heard of that one.`

And as always, happy to see China Mountain Zhang mentioned.

Thanks for sharing your list!


message 141: by Bryan (new)

Bryan Ok, my list, in no particular order:

A Storm of Swords by George R.R. Martin
Assassin's Fate by Robin Hobb
Iron Council by China Mieville
The Forever War by Joe Haldeman
Frankenstein by Mary Shelley
Tales of the Dying Earth by Jack Vance
The Swords of Lankhmar by Fritz Leiber
Shadow & Claw by Gene Wolfe
The Dispossessed by Ursula K. Le Guin
The Hobbit or There and Back Again by J.R.R. Tolkien
The Heroes by Joe Abercrombie
Neuromancer by William Gibson


message 142: by Oleksandr (new)

Oleksandr Zholud | 927 comments Anthony wrote: "@Glynis you’re the only person I know who’s read NY 2140.."

Make that two, I've read it too :)


message 143: by Oleksandr (new)

Oleksandr Zholud | 927 comments It is interesting to see that quite a few lists have predominantly 'new' books (last 20 years), while original list in another thread had mainly stuff from the 50s-70s.


message 144: by Valerie (new)

Valerie (darthval) | 781 comments Diane wrote: "Oh, I hadn’t noticed all the sighing in Way of King’s. But I will now. Sigh.

I listened to Wil Wheaton narrate John Scalzi’s Redshirts and was completely distracted by all the He said/she saids. ..."


I have noticed that in a bit of Scalzi's work. I note it, shrug, and continue enjoying it.


message 145: by Anna (new)

Anna (vegfic) | 10434 comments The discussion about author tics continues in the new thread:

https://www.goodreads.com/topic/show/...


message 146: by Valerie (new)

Valerie (darthval) | 781 comments Oleksandr wrote: "It is interesting to see that quite a few lists have predominantly 'new' books (last 20 years), while original list in another thread had mainly stuff from the 50s-70s."

In thinking about this, I discovered I was guilty of perusing books from my Goodreads list. As a result, I may have overlooked things like:
The Stories of Ray Bradbury - I discovered this collection in junior high. It definitely had an impact on me.
Anything by Edgar Allan Poe - I was born a creepster
Down to a Sunless Sea
Timeline

I don't know what this does to my Top 12. Perhaps I'll just pretend that these choices live in a pocket dimension. They count, but they don't count.

Sigh. (teehee)


message 147: by Allison, Fairy Mod-mother (new)

Allison Hurd | 14221 comments Mod
I'm a huge proponent of pocket dimensions to shove all the books into!


message 148: by Hank (new)

Hank (hankenstein) | 1230 comments Valerie wrote: ""Sigh. (teehee)

Our newest SciFi book club meme! Every time we respond to one of Anthony's comments we will all sigh at the end (sorry-not-sorry Anthony)


message 149: by Anna (new)

Anna (vegfic) | 10434 comments The discussion about author tics continues in the new thread:

https://www.goodreads.com/topic/show/...

Yes, I'm going to keep posting this for all eternity. I dressed up as an infinite loop for Halloween, and got stuck.


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