SciFi and Fantasy Book Club discussion
SciFi and Fantasy Book Challenge
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2023 Know Thy Shelf Challenge

The easiest way I've found is either to have your own spreadsheet or to make shelves with GR. You can export your data to a spreadsheet and add whatever additional data you want (like gender etc) and then the spreadsheet can do the math for you. I bet if we ask nice someone will make a base sheet we can steal for our own use ^^

A great set of data, Chessie! Looking forward to it! Yes, this will require some work, but for those who enjoy such things, I'm hoping it's well spent!

Wikipedia will be helpful

The one thing I've wanted to read more of for several years now is Sámi authors, but the selection and availability hasn't been great :( It's the thing I most want to "fix" about my reading though, so maybe I'll try to make 2023 the year I finally try to get my hands on some of the books I've wanted to read. I'm not committing to it yet though, because I don't want to set impossible goals.
Another one I could do is read from immigrant authors in Finland, or authors who are children of immigrants. I used to live in an area of Helsinki that was really diverse in regard to the native language of the residents, I could try to find a book from all of those language groups. I do know that I have several books like this already on my TBR, so it would be an easier goal to achieve.
Apparently posting about how I don't have ideas gives me ideas? :D

Antti Tuomainen
Leena Lehtolainen
and I just bought a bunch by Kati Hiekkapelto
this website lists a lot of mystery writers there:
https://scandicrimeproject.wordpress....

Farah was born in Somalia and writes in Finnish. Statovci was born in Kosovo and also writes in Finnish. Blasim was born in Iraq and writes in Arabic. They all live in Finland.

Wikipedia will be helpful"
and it's going very slow. Female authors don't tend to have birth dates. The country and gender bits are going good though. I do have a question about genderqueer though - I would have thought Charlie Jane Anders was genderqueer but she uses she/her pronouns according to what I've read.

Oh and yes, CJA is a woman. I think we might have a list of genderqueer authors in the IBB 2018 challenge thread, and we also have a few on the group shelf. I’m not sure if Allison would prefer that we do recs in the recs folder or here?


10 "Non-Finnish" ancestry
✔ Somalia - Tytöille, jotka ajattelevat olevansa yksin by Ujuni Ahmed
✔ Iraq - Kelloja ja vieraita by Hassan Blasim
✔ China - Suomen taivaan alla by TaoLin
✔ Vietnam - Varjo ja viileys by Quynh Tran
✔ India - Auringon asema by Ranya ElRamly
✔ Former Yugoslavia - Kissani Jugoslavia by Pajtim Statovci
✔ Sámi - Entiset elävät meissä - Saamelaisten historiat ja Suomi by Veli-Pekka Lehtola
✔ Roma - Mercedes Bentso – Totuus ja tunnustus by Linda-Maria Roine
✔ Third Culture Kids edited by Mona Eid, Koko Hubara
✔ Mixed by Alice Jäske, Priska Niemi-Sampan, Janina Waenthongkham
10 LGBTQIA+ authors/themes
✔ 23 transmyyttiä : Totta ja tarua transihmisistä by Mona Bling
✔ Bi- ja panseksuaalisuus by Jenny Kangasvuo
✔ Rakastan ihmistä – Keskusteluja biseksuaalisuudesta by Janne Ahjopalo, Olga Palo
✔ Rakkaudesta lajiin by Tiina Tuppurainen
✔ Nimeni on Alex by Miska Karhu
✔ Kissanaisia by Liliana Lento
✔ Ihana by Dess Terentjeva (Russia)
✔ Poika ja perhostunne by Jani Toivola
✔ Myrtti ja noitatukka + Myrtti ja kudelmataika by Ursula Mursu
✔ Lohikäärme, jolla oli keltaiset varpaat by Kuura Autere
4 Mental health themes
✔ Error – Mielen häiriöitä by Elina Järvi, Tiina Hotti
✔ Pakko — Kuinka OCD pakotti minut epäilemään kaikkea by Tuukka Hämäläinen
✔ Valvojat: tutkimusmatka unettomuuden historiaan by Pälvi Rantala
✔ Filigraanityttö by Anu Holopainen
Original post:
(view spoiler)


I looked at M/F percentages and my TBR is not too bad:
F = 229
M = 293
but the LGBTQ is lacking with only 7 on the shelf, so I will read those to bring the percentage up to 1.3% and will be on the lookout for more as the year goes by with the hope of taking it up to at least 2%. I'm thinking some of the authors are not listing that information on their bios. Here is what I have right now:
Victories Greater Than Death by Charlie Jane Anders
The Echo Wife by Sarah Gailey
Upright Women Wanted by Sarah Gailey
The Very Best of Caitlín R. Kiernan
The Unspoken Name by A.K. Larkwood
Middlegame by Seanan McGuire
Flotsam by R.J. Theodore
Next I looked at translated books and books from other countries and decided I had far too many American, UK, Canadian and other writers in English so I added these given that the US has a large percentage of people originally from these countries as well as the ones aforementioned
The Widow Queen by Elżbieta Cherezińska = Translated from Polish
Automatic Eve by Rokurō Inui = Translated from Japanese
The Cabinet by Kim Un-su = Translated from Korean
Love. an Archaeology by Fábio Fernandes = Translated from Brazilian Portuguese
The Kingdom by Jo Nesbø = Translated from Norwegian
Incomplete Solutions by Wole Talabi = Nigeria
Bloodbusters by Francesco Verso = Translated from Italian
To the Sky Kingdom by Tang Qi Gong Zi = Translated from Chinese
Night Shadows by Eva Björg Ægisdóttir = Translated from Icelandic
Lex Talionis by R.S.A. Garcia. = Trinidad
Northern Wrath by Thilde Kold Holdt = Denmark
The Best of All Possible Worlds by Karen Lord = Barbados
added
The Moose Paradox by Antti Tuomainen = Finland
Then to the last category: I found to my dismay that a lot of the authors on my shelf are old, so I'm going to add some youthful (under 35) writers here:
Elatsoe by Darcie Little Badger = 35
The Monster Baru Cormorant by Seth Dickinson = 33
The Ten Thousand Doors of January by Alix E. Harrow = 33
The Infinite Noise by Lauren Shippen = 31
The First Binding by R.R. Virdi = 32
None of the writers in my 500+ TBR pile were under 30, so I will be looking for the proverbial "fresh, young faces/voices)
This doesn't quite fit Allison's template, but it works for me
My Thoughtful Goal(s):
-10% nonfiction
-maintain a 50% male/female split
This past year my reading was 6% non-fiction, so I will need to increase my non-fiction choices. 48% of books read were by female authors; 52% were by male authors. That is not perfect but is pretty good, IMO. This upcoming year I will be intentional about it.
-10% nonfiction
-maintain a 50% male/female split
This past year my reading was 6% non-fiction, so I will need to increase my non-fiction choices. 48% of books read were by female authors; 52% were by male authors. That is not perfect but is pretty good, IMO. This upcoming year I will be intentional about it.

I've been looking through my TBR stats and was surprised:
Gender splits: 61% F, 37% M, 2% NB
---I realized that I subconsciously thought of Sci Fi/Fantasy to be a male dominated industry and this proved otherwise, at least on my shelf.
Ages: majority evenly split between ‘70's and ‘80's with a surprising 30% born before 1950.
Country of origin: 65% authors born in english-speaking countries, which I thought wasn't too bad. But I don’t think I have enough Central/South American authors on my list.
So, long post short ;) - I made a shelf for spec fiction by Central/S. American authors and added these to start:
The Inheritance of Orquídea Divina
Terminal 3
The Lost Dreamer
The Daughter of Doctor Moreau
Blazewrath Games


I don't believe there is. Being willing to research is part of the growth process?? I will recommend that if you don't want to make a spreadsheet, maybe just have a dedicated GR shelf for books with diverse elements so you can count and compare to your total books read. This wouldn't be a lot of extra work if you're already comfortable with GR shelving.

Indian:
Chosen Spirits and The Simoqin Prophecies by Samit Basu
The Wall by Gautam Bhatia
Generation 14 by Priya Sarukkai Chabria
The Beast with Nine Billion Feet by Anil Menon
Escape by Manjula Padmanabhan
Mexican/Latin American (there seems to be a dearth of science fiction authors here, but thankfully there are some fantasy authors that look good though):
The Daughter of Doctor Moreau and Certain Dark Things by Sylvia Moreno-Garcia
Labyrinth Lost by Zoraida Cordova
Infomocracy by Malka Ann Older
Nigerian:
Rosewater and Far from the Light of Heaven by Tade Thompson
David Mogo Godhunter and Son of the Storm by Suyi Davies Okungbowa
Who Fears Death by Nnedi Okorafor (ok so she's Nigerian American, but her stories often take place in Africa)
Nigerians in Space and After the Flare by Deji Bryce Olukotun
I think those will be good (and enjoyable) challenges to go after. And I'm getting more males in my mix ;)
the shelf i meant people to review first is their Already Read shelf, as in what you have already consumed! that's usually an easier one to manage and more useful!
and that looks like a great way to focus your search, Leslie, I hope you find some good books, and possibly a coworker to talk with!

mine contains 4X as many as my TBR pile (a bit over 500) so I wasn't going there. I'm trying to make this year's reads change percentages.

Whatever works for you, Chessie! I guess my point is no need to do this for every book you've ever looked at!
You could start small, William! just men and women or people from your country vs other countries :)

(I'm not going to talk about the books I read for this challenge, as they're all in Finnish, but I wanted to mention this anyway, because yeah, I wouldn't be reading this if I hadn't decided to do this challenge.)
Yay! I'm so pleased this one is going well for you since so often you find such horrid stories haha
Okay, so I already keep my bookshelf in parity with authors who identify (or present, if they're dead already) as men or women. This year I'm going to focus on race. Given that I intend to focus on US demographics based on my supposed challenge of 75 books, I want to read:
13 books by people of Hispanic or Latin descent
8 books by Black/African authors
4 books by Asian authors
1 book by a Native author
This is subject to change if/when I realize I've completely embarrassed my math teachers
13 books by people of Hispanic or Latin descent
8 books by Black/African authors
4 books by Asian authors
1 book by a Native author
This is subject to change if/when I realize I've completely embarrassed my math teachers

The only book that I still remember in any detail from my undergraduate engineering days is How to Lie with Statistics. Not that I'm necessarily endorsing this approach if embarrassment looms or that I'd admit to having used it myself (and that book, in particular, is eye-rollingly dated in so many ways), but sometimes it's just how you look at it.
I'm my case I'd be looking at age (I live in one of the demographically oldest counties in the US) and at Indigenous authors (multiple tribal units have a presence in this area). I'll need to spend some time generating the (ahem) statistics for that.
This is a fascinating challenge. Thanks!
Yes, this is a bit wobbly given how many different ways you can make math give you numbers, but here it really is the thought that counts! eager to see what you find, Raucous!

I was surprised to learn that I have read more books by women authors (52%) than men (45%). (The rest were anthologies of mixed genders or nonbinary authors.) I could be doing a better job of reading non-white authors, though I have been more intentional about that the last three years. I sometimes had a hard time determining if an author was LGBTQIA+, so I feel like my analysis for that category is not very reliable.
I've read about 80% fiction versus 20% nonfiction, with a good mix of genres, though fantasy is definitely in the lead at 37%. (This is probably influenced by my son's love of fantasy adventure stories as read-alouds.) About 51% of the books I read were adult books, with the rest pretty evenly divided between YA, MG, and children's.
The area with the biggest noticeable gaps was author's country. Most of the books I have read were written by authors from the US, Canada, the UK, and Australia, with a smattering of authors from other European, Asian, and African countries. I had only one book written by an author from South America, though, and no books written by Mexican, Central American, or Caribbean authors.
So, for this year, I'm going to be intentional in choosing some books by authors from the western hemisphere who are not from the US or Canada (and possibly from other parts of the world that I don't have much representation from). I'm looking forward to the challenge of finding some new authors (and I may be making a recommendations post to try to gather some ideas).
Yay! This is what I was hoping it would be like. I'm so glad, you're going to have so much fun exploring! And lots of warm fuzzies for reading to your son <3

Stolen by Ann-Helén Laestadius
Just thought I’d mention it in case you haven’t heard of it yet, Anna. I can’t link to it due to being on mobile.

On the whole, I've been loving this challenge so much that I'm about to finish my *fourteenth* KTS book XD I've added a second dozen to my goal, but probably won't be updating it here, since they're still all books in Finnish.
Books mentioned in this topic
Filigraanityttö (other topics)23 transmyyttiä : totta ja tarua transihmisistä (other topics)
Tytöille, jotka ajattelevat olevansa yksin (other topics)
Entiset elävät meissä - Saamelaisten historiat ja Suomi (other topics)
Bi- ja panseksuaalisuus (other topics)
More...
Authors mentioned in this topic
Anu Holopainen (other topics)Linda-Maria Roine (other topics)
Ujuni Ahmed (other topics)
Alice Jäske (other topics)
Veli-Pekka Lehtola (other topics)
More...
STEP ONE:
Pick a facet of your life--it could be geographical, professional, religious, or anything else that has statistics you can reference and that interests you to explore.
STEP TWO:
Pick a few demographics that interest you about that facet. For example, what percentage of that group are men, women or genderqueer? What percent are immigrants or non-native speakers of the local language? How old is that group, on average?
STEP THREE:
Look at your "Read" shelf and see how closely your consumption mirrors the life you're living.
STEP FOUR:
Pick a way to play!
Thoughtful
Read 1 book by an author in a demographic that is lacking on your shelf for each of the criteria you identified in Step Two.
Ex. I'm a US citizen. My bookshelf is 60% books by men, 39% books by women, 1% by nonbinary or genderqueer authors. The demographics in the US are 49% men, 50% women and 1% nonbinary or genderqueer. Therefore, I would read at least 1 book by a woman.
Experimental
Pick a number of books to pledge to this challenge. Can you make the books you pledge "look like" the world you live in as measured in percentages?
Dedicated
Can you make all the books you read in 2023 match the demographic percentages you focused on in Step Two?
Transformative
Read books to help make your "read" shelf match the demographic percentages you listed in Step Two. How close can you get in 1 year?
STEP FIVE:
Share your results! What does your shelf look like? How hard is it to find books that match the criteria you're seeking? How many other parts of your life could you try this with? What did you learn at the end of the challenge?