SciFi and Fantasy Book Club discussion
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Help us pick subgenres/themes for next year!

- non-US/UK/CA and/or translated works
- short story collections
- novellas!
- social science
- lighter/funny/hopepunk
- urban fantasy with out the romance/erotica
- Robots/AI/Androids
I might second more later.
And this is probably something nobody is interested in, but how about “related works”? Like an author biography or the type of this that gets nominated for the Hugo category.

And anthologies based on regions are also good, preferably translated works.
Adding my voice to novellas as well.

Oh, I like Fluff and Stuff for a break from time to time.

- Warm, positive works (Hopepunk or whatever it will be called next year).
- Found family
- Post scarcity
- Post singularity
- I love the sound of "fantasy not inspired by Medieval/Renaissance Europe."
- Inspired by mythology (both SF and fantasy, and especially options outside classic western mythology)
- Novellas (it feels like there are so many more options here these days)
- Short story collections (I would second that)
- Translated works
- Literary
- Ecological focus


I don't think that anyone really does, actually. It could be a thread of its own. (Akin to the 'likable characters' discussion.) (For example I do not, personally, mean beach reads or fluff.)
(I've asked for rec's for light and gotten stuff that needed extreme content warnings. Blurbs have similarly misled me, with murder mysteries that have gore and child abuse marked as light. Hence, the list of specific examples to help us brainstorm a simpler way of saying at least what is not or giving examples of works that do qualify.)
feel free to make the thread! I do think I understand what you're looking for, I just haven't found much of it and attempts to uncover more have had mixed results. but i am up to keep trying!
(Yeah, I fear that a lot of the subgenres we want to see more of just aren't being published for whatever reason. I'd love to talk with people in the publishing industry about this one day)

- hopepunk
- books in translation and/or not by US/UK authors
- anthropological SF
- space opera (ideally not by somebody already on the shelf)

This one was read in 8/2016: The Aeronaut's Windlass

Le Guin, Ursula K. 7
Gaiman, Neil 6
Jemisin, N.K. 5
Pratchett, Terry 5
Sanderson, Brandon 5
Scalzi, John 5
Butler, Octavia E. 4
Dick, Philip K. 4
Kay, Guy Gavriel 4
Leckie, Ann 4

I *always* want to do this, but people will grumble if we try to gently say that maybe we don't abolutely *need* another Pratchett, Sanderson, or Scalzi on the shelf? Or even another UKLG :)
So yes, mods would love to do this more often, if members will let us! ^_^

as far as self-published books go, a lot of people might have a problem with them as they might only be available on one platform and not in hardcopy or through libraries

This one was read in 8/2016: The Aeronaut's Windlass"
That was why I used it as an example. I read it and enjoyed it. I think it would be good to do this with other authors as well. Read something that is out of their main stream writing.

as far as self-published books go, a lot of people might have a problem with them as they might only be available on one platform and not in hardcopy or through libraries"
Understandable. I get some on Kindle, but not everyone uses that platform. And I was thinking more of the hit-and-miss aspect of those books as more than the platform issue. Thus possible alternatives. So far the lists look great.


I agree, you can't read too much UKLG, but we don't have to add *all* of them to the group shelf! :D

- Post-apocalyptique
- Non-USA/UK authors, translations
- Fantasy based on mythology from Asia, Latam and Africa
- Found family books will always go platinum in my house
- Cheerful happy stuff!! I think the real world is providing more dystopian nonsense than I can handle so lately all my reads have been lighter stuff lol

On January 1st, 2023, this group will be renamed to SHPBC (Shiny Happy People Book Club.)
More information: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YYOKM...

On January 1st, 2023, this group will be renamed to SHPBC (Shiny Happy People Book Club.)
More information: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YYOKM..."
LOL!

On January 1st, 2023, this group will be renamed to SHPBC (Shiny Happy People Book Club.)
More information: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YYOKM..."
💕🥂

On January 1st, 2023, this group will be renamed to SHPBC (Shiny Happy People Book Club.)
Not the S**tposting Book Club? Just as well, I suppose.

What other themes and subgenres would you like to see?

What I'd really love: if we split this up into individual categories: one month Asian-inspired fantasy, one month African-inspired, one month Latin Americas/Native American. This way, we don't make all non-EU fantasy compete with each other for one month of the year with only one winner actually getting read.
Actually, my personal preference would be either splitting it up further into North-Africa (Egyptian, etc.), Middle-East, India, China, Japan, Korea, and so on; or just repeating larger regional themes more than once over the year. What do you guys think? (If we do split it up into smaller regions, I'm for including a month for Europe, as well.)
Other themes I'd love:
- SF archaeology (exploration of ancient alien ruins/ships/objects)
- terraforming
- 19th century-inspired fantasy (I love Gothic spooky stuff, Victorian, steampunk, etc.)
- mystery plot (could apply to SF or fantasy)
- recent award-winners (SF or fantasy)
- YA fantasy
- space opera or space adventure
- indie/self-pub
- Middlegrade fantasy (this is where all the light-hearted, magical, uplifting stuff is hidden, people!)
- anthologies
- comedic (SF or fantasy)
- aquatic
- genre-benders
- military
- cute companions (animal, robot, magical being, ...)

What I'd really love: if we split this up into individual categories: one month Asian-inspired fantasy, one month African-inspired, one month Latin Americas/Native American. This way, we don't make all non-EU fantasy compete with each other for one month of the year with only one winner actually getting read. "
That’s a very good suggestion.



Time Travel (SF or F)
Retellings of fairy tales/myths
Books about books
Books with giant monsters/robots
Early 20th Century period SF/F
Altering Memories
I love all the world fantasy ideas! We've done several iterations of it, but it's great to know that we're not shoving world fantasy and translated works down your throats! We can def do more!

- dragons
- motley band of heroes
By the way, with my world fantasy ideas I was referring to fantasy inspired by the culture or mythology of a particular region or country, not that it needs to be from there or set there.
+1 on the "good YA" (or adult-reader-compatible YA)

- dragons
- motley band of heroes
By the way, with my world fantasy ideas I was referring to fantasy inspired by the culture or mythology of a particular region or country, not that it n..."
Thank you for clarifying adult-reader-compatible YA, Eva- this is what I meant but didn't properly describe.

Oh and +1 for dragons!

edited to correct the title ... ^^' it was too early for my brain.


other ideas for themes could be
Psy interactions with Animals other Humans (mind reading) - Dragonflight and The Book of Jhereg come to mind here
and maybe a twofer - two books using the same source material but translated into the SF&F realm and comparing the two: Beauty: A Retelling of the Story of Beauty and the Beast and Bryony and Roses for one (the synopses of the Kingfisher novel seems like it's a Beauty & the Beast redo)

+1 Shiny happy people/Hopepunk
+1 world fantasy/ inspired by different regions
+1 novellas
+1 gender bending
+1 self-published/indie/hidden gems (perhaps by # of ratings?)
+1 post-scarcity
+1 first contact
+1 music
+1 mind-reading and psychic abilities
+1 animal/mythic/robot companions
+1 exo-botany/exo-zoology
●Botany/plants/gardening in fantasy as well
●The Pathos of Time - how I refer to books that take place over a character's entire life, or across eras with immortals, or with time dilation in sci-fi, not sure how to label it. Generation-spanning?
●LGBT+ Characters
●Disabled Characters
●Neurodiverse Characters
I know we also have amazing challenges devoted to diverse and inclusive books, but always here for more of them!

On January 1st, 2023, this group will be renamed to SHPBC (Shiny Happy People Book Club.)
More information: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YYOKM..."
LOL almost makes me wish I was more of a REM fan.



Short story collections
Translated works
Ban on authors after 3 times on the shelf:
I'm more likely to read them without help from the group. I like being introduced to authors I might otherwise miss out on.


+1

Ok, for purposes of this thread, I nominate either optimistic, or *cheerful*, instead of the overused-to-the-point-of-meaninglessly-vague light.
But I will be creating a thread to discuss what we mean by light reads. (and beach/summer reads for that matter)
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Yes!
Allison wrote: "oh post scarcity is one I'd like too"
Also down for this.
How about „fantasy not inspired by Medieval/Renaissance Europe“
(I feel like I should put extra quotation marks around Medieval and Renaissance since most fantasy has a very loose grasp on what those historical periods were like anyway, but that‘s a different discussion)