SciFi and Fantasy Book Club discussion
SciFi and Fantasy Book Challenge
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2021 Read All the Books: Around the Shelf in Eight(y) Years
Bonnie, I have all faith that you'll be watching it all with the eye of the tiger!
Emmett, I don't believe that's underachieving, I think that's an entirely healthy boundary, and 2021 is the year of healthy boundaries for me. All the props to you, my friend!
Emmett, I don't believe that's underachieving, I think that's an entirely healthy boundary, and 2021 is the year of healthy boundaries for me. All the props to you, my friend!

321 books on shelf
115 books read
014 books started & discarded; 4 of the 14 I might try again
192 books to-read
009 books read 2 or more times
I've set my yearly goal to 16, like I've done the past few years but never reached. I came closer in 2020, reading Bookshelf Books:
#1 - Recursion (2019) by Blake Crouch (Hardcover, 336 pages) (01/04/20) *****
#2 - The Last Wish (The Witcher 0.5) (1993) by Andrzej Sapkowski; translated from Polish by Danusia Stok (Mass Market Paperback, 359 pages) (02/06/20) *****
#3 - The Goblin Emperor (2014) by Katherine Addison (483 pages) (03/11/20) *****
#4 – The Many-Coloured Land (Saga of the Pliocene Exile #1) (1981) by Julian May (Hardcover, First Printing edition, 415 pages) (04/13/20) ***
#5 - City of Stairs (The Divine Cities #1) (2014) by Robert Jackson Bennett (Goodreads Author) (Paperback, 452 pages) (06/24/20) *****
#6 - The Memory Police (1994) by Yōko Ogawa; translated from the Japanese by Stephen Snyder (Hardcover, 274 pages) (07/29/20) ***
#7 - Shadowshaper (Shadowshaper Cypher #1) (2015) by Daniel José Older (Goodreads Author) (Young Adult) (Hardcover, 297 pages) (08/26/20) **
#8 – Catseye (Dipple #1) (1961) by Andre Norton (Paperback, Ace #F-167, 176 pages) (09/09/20) **
#9 – The Bone Shard Daughter (The Drowning Empire #1) (2020) by Andrea Stewart (Goodreads Author) (Hardcover, 438 pages) (11/28/20) ****
I've got Fate of the Fallen on deck right now. (I've already read The Best of All Possible Worlds back in 2013 when it first was published; definitely a 5 star read!)
The reason for 16 books: one per month plus one per quarter.

I’ve been chipping away at the Club bookshelf as long as this challenge has been running but I now realise I’ve never actually officially signed up for it.
I managed to read 17 off the bookshelf in 2020 (not counting a reread) but that was an exceptional year cos‘ being in the travel industry I found myself with a lot more spare time on my hands to read than usual. I’m hoping things will pick up again this year and I will once again have to do most of my reading in different time zones.
Having 188 club books under my belt at the start of this year I’m going to go for a challenge of 12 to get me to the fabled heights of 200 read, but like quite a few here I’ll also secretly hope for a few more if I’m lucky.





Reading long, hitting the books
took my time, read my pages
Went the distance, now I'm done with that tome
Just a man, picking out a his next read!
It's the Eye of the tiger...
Currently Reading
On Deck






















Finished!

DNF

Progress: 8/12
✔️ 1) Neverwhere -- 1/25/21
✔️ 2) The City We Became -- 6/2/21
✔️ 3) Six of Crows -- 6/13/21
✔️ 4) Shadowshaper -- 7/13/21
✔️ 5) The Time Machine -- 7/30/21
✔️ 6) Zoo City -- 9/20/21
✔️ 7) Station Eleven -- 10/17/21
✔️ 8) The Outside -- 11/24/21
The Stand
The Fifth Season
The Killing Moon
A Wizard of Earthsea

Owned:
The Way of Kings
Leviathan Wakes
A Princess of Mars
The Night Circus
Seveneves
Spinning Silver
Ship of Magic
Foreigner
The Mote in God's Eye
Ubik
Watership Down
A Fire Upon the Deep
Jonathan Strange & Mr Norrell
Warbreaker
The Golem and the Jinni
The Song of Achilles
The Final Empire
Sphere
The Name of the Wind
Altered Carbon
The Lions of Al-Rassan
The Stand
The Crown Conspiracy
The Well of Ascension (Mistborn)
Not owned:
The Handmaid's Tale
The Eye of the World
A Clash of Kings
Armada
Hyperion
The Fall of Hyperion
Old Man's War
Stranger in a Strange Land
Six Wakes
Parasite
The Island of Dr. Moreau
The Long Earth
Dirk Gently's Holistic Detective Agency
Consider Phlebas
The Gunslinger
Pawn of Prophecy
The Last Unicorn
The Neverending Story
Flowers for Algernon
The Quantum Thief
Magician: Apprentice Volume 1
The Last Wish
The Way of Shadows
The Black Prism

I’m not very interested in a lot of the previous group reads unless I already owned them before joining this group and I have plenty to keep me busy for the next couple of years. I doubt I’ll ever make much of a dent.

Read January, so far:
1) The Poppy War
2) Planetfall
Currently reading:
3) Rendezvous with Rama
To read: (Books I own) - not in order
4) The Left Hand of Darkness
5) The Word for World is Forest
6) The Stars My Destination
7) Ringworld
8) The Forever War
9) The Caves of Steel
10) The Memory Police
11) A Scanner Darkly
12) Cat's Cradle
Things I may consume on Storytel or buy in a book sale:
13) The Long Way to a Small, Angry Planet
14) The Calculating Stars
15) Semiosis



RNG games?


Those sound less harmful than throwing darts at your bookshelf.


At least it is done now, unlike when I started it. I figured seven books in a series, has to be done. Wrong.

**cough** **cough** Game of Thrones

1. Weaveworld by Clive Barker - 1/19
2. Cloud Atlas by David Mitchell - 1/20
3. Jade City by Fonda Lee - 2/8

And a few others. The Name of the Wind series comes to mind as well. But yeah, much like that.

I think I have The Name of the Wind on my list but I might refuse to start it until we at least get a release date for the next book...

The War of the Worlds

Have to love the library. I found this to be a much better read than the Fafrd and Gray Mouser book. It certainly holds up much better over time than the other. In fact in spite of the fact that I have seen a number of versions of this on film and even listened to an album of it, that I enjoy to this day the book was still new and fresh in the reading. I was very impressed with the work.

Also, I wondering how people afford to buy all these books?? Libraries and used bookstores don't always have some of these great titles on the list and I have avoided buying a Kindle so far. (I have a somewhat alarmist conspiracy theory that the digital versions of books could easily be altered over time by publishers or some nefarious group and we wouldn't notice as readers). So how do people usually get copies of books to read?

Once you've downloaded a book to a Kindle, it will not change unless you have auto-updates turned on. And those updates are usually to either change the cover or correct reported typos. I can't think of what nefarious changes could be made to most of the books I read. I have heard of nefarious changes being made to physical history and biology books with the sneaking in of creationism...

I do buy some but I don't like buying ebooks from Amazon because they can, and have, removed them from people's devices so I don't particularly trust them. You can still read books with Kindle for pc or with the app so you don't actually have to buy one to use the service.
For paper books I buy used ones from Amazon or Thriftbooks.

That said, some books have been removed from the Kindle Store, but they are still available to download from your Content and Devices page on the website. I have 20-30 books in this category including The Martian and for that book, it's because i bought it when it was self-published. It was subsequently picked up by a major publisher and there is no longer a product page for that version, but I can still download it from my account
You could also buy another e-reader, then you can buy your ebooks from other sources, actually have them on your computer (so they only get altered or deleted if you do it) and bypass amazon entirely, which is not such a bad thing to try to do.

For devices sold in Germany, Amazon discourages that. You can only send ebooks you bought from other sources to your Kindle via a (legal) detour. For some books, this detour doesn't work because of their DRM, so you would have to crack the DRM to do so, which would be illegal. Amazon does that so you prefer buying ebooks from them.
I don't know how Amazon's policy is in other countries, but that's the reason I use an ebook reader from another manufacturer.
I don't know how Amazon's policy is in other countries, but that's the reason I use an ebook reader from another manufacturer.

Thanks so much for the suggestions. I'm going to look into all those sources. Good to know about the Kindle settings too.

none of the sources I listed have DRM and you can either send them to your Kindle via email or using a Send to Kindle app
https://www.amazon.com/gp/sendtokindl...
https://www.amazon.com/gp/sendtokindl...
https://www.amazon.com/gp/sendtokindl...
and provided they are in mobi format w/o DRM, all will be fine. However, Amazon does not consider them Books, They're Docs.
and I forgot to list the free Tor short stories and free book of the month which also do not have DRM.
I acquired several of the Book Club books from either Tor or Humble or another non- Amazon source and here are some
Kushiel's Dart
The Calculating Stars
All the Birds in the Sky
Witchmark

Also, I wondering how people afford to buy all these books?? ..."
Welcome, David, and congratulations on your novel (just follow the rues about not promoting it in this group!)
I use inter-library loan (ILL). I use it a lot. I think the librarians have wept when they saw me approach the information desk. (Of course, it is all electronic now. But I think a heard a faint scream, like a hard drive fusing itself, last time I hit my Marina* "Submit" button.)
As a last resort, after libraries including hoopla and Libby* and Marina*, and LibriVox and Project Gutenburg, I have an Audible subscription and Amazon Prime. I've done a few Club books on Audible for convenience, but I don't think I've had to downshift to Amazon for a Club book, ever.
(*Libby and *Marina are Maryland library services. Libby connects to Overdrive electronic/audio books, and Marina provides ILL to Maryland libraries with outreach to national requests)


I use the Send to Kindle app most of the time
https://www.amazon.com/gp/sendtokindl...
https://www.amazon.com/gp/sendtokindl...
it seems to have a bit of a glitch filling in the author name, so you need to do it yourself

Alphabet of Thorn,
The Best of All Possible Worlds,
Six of Crows.

Alphabet of Thorn,
The Best of All Possible Worlds,
Six of Crows."
I really enjoyed the Alphabet of Thorn when I read it. How did you find it?


What is there to say about this book. Contorted, Convoluted, Contrived, Lacking in characters that make you feel the least bit of concern or empathy about, Major class Deus ex Machina, Unnecessary plot twits, and about the only thing lacking to prove and altered state was the Albatross.
One of the few books that I can say that the movie was better.


Alphabet of Thorn,
The Best of All Possible Worlds,
Six of Crows."
I really enjoyed the Alphab..."
I liked it a lot! I was intrigued by the description when it came up as a group read so I picked it up and I'm glad I did. Would definitely read more McKillip.

I wasn't enthralled with the book. It left me wondering why he is ranked so high as an author, but then it is a personal taste as much as anything else. It was interesting but not enough to make me want more. I find it interesting that so many really good movies come out of his work when for the most part I struggle to get through them.
Someone is seeing something I am missing it would seem. Well, that is the way of the world after all I guess.
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25 to make a dent? I wouldn't want to hurt a bookshelf; I treat books with care.
12 as a recommendation? I am an underachiever.
I am going to go with 8.
Definitely going to tackle:
A Wizard of Earthsea
Semiosis
Prince of Thorns
The Killing Moon
The Graveyard Book (in Vietnamese for the added challenge)
+ will pull the other 3 from the endless stack