SciFi and Fantasy Book Club discussion

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SciFi and Fantasy Book Challenge > Alessandro's Directory (comments ahoy!)

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message 1: by a.g.e. montagner (last edited Sep 04, 2025 05:53AM) (new)

a.g.e. montagner (agem) | 667 comments I resolved to open a thread for my reading progress, plus updates for the rare challenge accomplishment.

2024 Challenges:
(view spoiler)

Leftovers from 2024:
(view spoiler)

2025 Challenges:
2025 Mount TBR Challenge (here);
2025 Read All the Books 12: Books by the Dozen (here);
2025 Science Fiction & Fantasy Booklovers Combat (below, thread, archetype list);

2025 Calendar:

January:
Ghosts by Edith Wharton (discussion not on Goodreads);
Translation State by Ann Leckie (buddy read);

February:
If He Hollers Let Him Go by Chester Himes (discussion);

March:
Il paesaggio cosmico by Leonard Susskind;
The Bloody Chamber and Other Stories by Angela Carter (buddy read);
Neuromancer by William Gibson (first and final thoughts);

April:
Romeo and Juliet by William Shakespeare;
The Deep by Solomon Rivers (discussions here and here);
Lanny and Shy by Max Porter, for an interview with the author;

May :

June:
Entangled Life by Merlin Sheldrake (non-fiction buddy read);
Poor Things by Alasdair Gray (discussion not on Goodreads);

July:
Una linea nel mondo: un anno sul Mare del Nord by Dorthe Nors;
Maledetti uomini by Andrev Walden;
Bestiario artico by Frank Westerman;

August:
Solaris by Stanisław Lem (first and final thoughts);
Fat City by Leonard Gardner (discussion);
The Diamond Age by Neal Stephenson (first and final thoughts);

September:
Harlem Shuffle and Crook Manifesto by Colson Whitehead (discussions here and here);
I Am Not Sidney Poitier by Percival Everett (first and final thoughts);
The Knockout Artist by Harry Crews (first and last thoughts);
The Ballad of the Sad Café and Other Stories by Carson McCullers (first and final thoughts);

October:
The Raven Tower by Ann Leckie (first and final thoughts);
A Night in the Lonesome October by Roger Zelazny (first and final thoughts; daily read 2019, 2020 and 2021);

November:
Fahrenheit 451 by Ray Bradbury;

December:
The Raven and the Reindeer by T. Kingfisher;

Next:
The Last Unicorn: Deluxe Edition by Peter S. Beagle (first and final thoughts);
The Garden Against Time by Olivia Laing (discussion not on Goodreads);
Count Zero and Mona Lisa Overdrive by William Gibson (buddy read);
The Once and Future King by T.H. White (first and last thoughts);
The Warmth of Other Suns by Isabel Wilkerson (discussion);
Tutte le cosmicomiche by Italo Calvino (buddy read);
Niebla al mediodía by Tomás González (buddy read);
The History of Sound by Ben Shattuck (discussion);
Provenance by Ann Leckie (buddy read).

Leftovers from 2025:
(view spoiler)


message 2: by a.g.e. montagner (last edited Jun 30, 2025 07:45AM) (new)

a.g.e. montagner (agem) | 667 comments SFFBC 2025 Science Fiction & Fantasy Booklovers Combat:

Science Fiction Challenges
(view spoiler)

Full Character Archetypes List
(view spoiler)


a.g.e. montagner (agem) | 667 comments [placeholder]


a.g.e. montagner (agem) | 667 comments [placeholder]


message 6: by Cheryl L (new)

Cheryl L | 415 comments Looking forward to your 2025!


a.g.e. montagner (agem) | 667 comments Indeed! Thanks.

I'm very satisfied with my 2024. It was unusually focused on speculative fiction, including titles that were right at the top of my waiting list: the Broken Earth trilogy, the Hainish cycle, now the Imperial Radch. I had a sort of reverential fear towards them, but I'm happy to have plunged head first.

One thing I'll try to improve in the next year(s) is reading more in Spanish.


message 8: by Cheryl L (new)

Cheryl L | 415 comments I've got to finish up The Dispossessed: An Ambiguous Utopia, which I struggled with. It feels so much like the Cold War era that I got a bit bored.


a.g.e. montagner (agem) | 667 comments Well it was a Cold War novel.

It's also very layered, as it elaborates on many of Le Guin's long-standing concerns. The depth of those novels is amazing, and The Dispossessed in particular seems the capstone to that entire period of her output.
I could happily start re-reading the Hainish novels tomorrow.


message 10: by DivaDiane (new)

DivaDiane SM | 3674 comments I’m disappointed that I didn’t manage to fit in any UKL rereads this year, when they were all up for discussion. That’s one of the reasons I have decided to limit my participation in Group Reads to books I already own. I might not manage, but I really need to make a dent in the collection of unread books. And I hope this affords me time for rereads, as I’ll be mood reading for the most part.


message 11: by a.g.e. montagner (last edited Dec 27, 2024 09:50AM) (new)

a.g.e. montagner (agem) | 667 comments I explicitly focused on the writers that I wanted to explore: Ursula K. Le Guin, Samuel R. Delany, N.K. Jemisin, G. Willow Wilson...

As a result, I tend to swing much more often with the reread schedule than the fantasy or sci-fi books of the month. There's simply so much great material that the group has already gone through without me.
For reference, I decided to join for This Is How You Lose the Time War since it is short (and I'd been complaining about selections being too long!) and also our Virtual Book Club for that month, but it was nowhere near the authors just mentioned in terms of quality and personal satisfaction.

For what is worth, I'm also in favour of re-reading books. Often I have the urge to read a book twice in a row, to better appreciate the finer details.


message 12: by Cheryl L (new)

Cheryl L | 415 comments a.g.e. montagner wrote: "As a result, I tend to swing much more often with the reread schedule than the fantasy or sci-fi books of the month."

I am also in this group. There is so much on the shelf that I want to read already that I don't often get to the BOTM unless it's high on my TBR. I often want to continue/complete a series that we've started but haven't continued on with.


message 13: by a.g.e. montagner (new)

a.g.e. montagner (agem) | 667 comments Well yeah, that's the thing: you join for the titles you want to read, and in my/our case those are most often group rereads. I can imagine that more seasoned members, who have put those under their belts, might be curious about more exotic fare.

Series are a different topic: I've read no less than three this year, because I knew how well regarded they are. Generally I prefer stand-alone novels, but in the future, whenever I'm afraid of a tome, I will be able to remember that I've already gone through His Dark Materials or the Imperial Radch.


message 14: by DivaDiane (new)

DivaDiane SM | 3674 comments I am also much more interested in books that have stood the test of time, than the brand new works that tend to get read in one of my other groups. SFFBC is not so bad with the latest thing always winning, thankfully. If it had already crossed my radar often enough, I might be tempted to buy it, but I almost never read them contemporaneously with the group.


message 15: by a.g.e. montagner (new)

a.g.e. montagner (agem) | 667 comments It's also true that the Broken Earth and Imperial Radch trilogies are both less than a decade old, and both were acclaimed from very early on.

Will they "stand the test of time"? Very probably. But not quite yet, I don't think.


message 16: by Cheryl L (last edited Dec 28, 2024 08:12AM) (new)

Cheryl L | 415 comments It's interesting that there are a few of us that read from the shelf rather than the BOTM. I have a few series that are on my list for 2025 that will consume quite a bit of my time: Remembrance of Earth's Past: The Three-Body Trilogy, Terra Ignota, Murderbot, the Teixcalaan dualogy, Children of Time trilogy, Sun Eater, and Stormlight Archive. (It's possible I should make my own thread instead of putting all of my reading plans on Ale's ☺️)


message 17: by Olga (new)

Olga Yolgina | 589 comments Cheryl L wrote: "It's interesting that there are a few of us that read from the shelf rather than the BOTM. I have a few series that are on my list for 2025 that will consume quite a bit of my time: [book:Remembran..."

Maybe it could be a good idea, because Murderbot, the Teixcalaan dualogy, Sun Eater, and Stormlight Archive are on my radar for 2025 as well.


message 18: by a.g.e. montagner (last edited Dec 28, 2024 09:17AM) (new)

a.g.e. montagner (agem) | 667 comments But I have nothing against BotM. It's not a default choice, at least for me. It's just that not every month can you find something that matches Le Guin or even Leckie.
It happens, though: I read The Spear Cuts Through Water when it was our BotM and haven't stopped talking about it ever since.
Not to mention the truism that being Book of the Month is the only way to enter the group shelf.

I read a handful of series in 2024, and I'm not sure it will happen again in 2025.
William Gibson is possibly the only one that's calling me at the moment. And Octavia E. Butler, whenever I'll feel ready for her novels.

I'm also curious about the Teixcalaan diptych for the Meso-American connection, but pretty sure I wouldn't be able to keep up the pace considering the other books I've already planned.

You're obviously very welcome to hang out in this neighbourhood. Shall I bring tea?
(I'm still in the Radch, as you can see).


message 19: by DivaDiane (new)

DivaDiane SM | 3674 comments Something herbal please.

I also have nothing against the BOTM, per se, it just happens that I am usually voting for an underdog and rarely for the one that will win. That doesn’t mean that those that win are not good books and won’t eventually stand the test of time. Which, by the way, for relatively young books, I think both the Raadch and the Jemisin will do. And of course, putting the lie to what I’ve said, I have already read both, and the Teixcaalan (sp?) duology. I am nothing if not inconsistent.


message 20: by a.g.e. montagner (last edited Dec 28, 2024 09:45AM) (new)

a.g.e. montagner (agem) | 667 comments Yeah, nominations and voting can be frustrating at times.
Great books are nominated but not seconded and we end up in what feels to me like a disappointing middle ground.

As far as reading choices go, the only thing that matters eventually is whether you're satisfied. And I'm extremely happy with the quality, if not the quantity, of my 2024. But quantity has been average: a little above 50 books and 10K pages.


message 21: by CBRetriever (new)

CBRetriever | 6105 comments DivaDiane wrote: "Something herbal please.

I also have nothing against the BOTM, per se, it just happens that I am usually voting for an underdog and rarely for the one that will win. That doesn’t mean that those ..."


as I'm usually waiting for a book to come down in price, I seldom read the BOTMs that are brand new and tend to nominate something from my TBR pile or something I've enjoyed (Vlad Taltos series for one and a Charles de Lint book for another) in the hopes that someone else might like it


message 22: by a.g.e. montagner (last edited Dec 28, 2024 10:45AM) (new)

a.g.e. montagner (agem) | 667 comments Same for me, for the most part. But I'm aware of the power of hype, especially in the field of speculative fiction. I mean aren't those covers gorgeous?


message 23: by Cheryl L (new)

Cheryl L | 415 comments The things that I vote for in BOTM rarely win either, but I have read some of the books this year that I certainly enjoyed.


message 24: by a.g.e. montagner (new)

a.g.e. montagner (agem) | 667 comments More often than not, it's actually down to how many books I manage to fit in any given month. Sometimes some of them simply fall off the sides.

For instance, I'd really love to read Nuestra parte de noche which is the January fantasy BotM, but there's no way I could do it with the other stuff I've already planned.


message 25: by Cheryl L (new)

Cheryl L | 415 comments Yes, that happens to me also. I would like to read Our Share of Night, but I also feel a pressing need to finish Remembrance of Earth's Past: The Three-Body Trilogy, which I am committed to finishing in the first half of the year and which takes extra brain power to understand.


message 26: by a.g.e. montagner (last edited Jan 11, 2025 02:22AM) (new)

a.g.e. montagner (agem) | 667 comments I will use my own thread to talk about rating, and specifically what I call the four-star syndrome. Even before joining Goodreads, I used this system for rating:

1 star: waste of time, paper, ink, bytes.
2 stars: readable.
3 stars: good.
4 stars: excellent.
5 stars: masterwork.

Being mostly free to choose my reading and dealing by trade, for the most part, with masterworks, nearly all of my votes are in the upper levels. And there lies the four-star syndrome: whenever I like a book, it is likely to be rated a four, more or less automatically. I've recently (let's say since 2024) tried to be more varied: to give 3 stars when a book isn't entirely satisfying and 5 stars when I find it truly outstanding, even if perhaps not a masterwork that will endure the ages. Even so, I still give more four-star ratings than all of the others combined.

I should add, perhaps, that I try to be as impersonal as possible in my ratings, based on quality (which I believe is objective) more than personal preference.


message 27: by DivaDiane (new)

DivaDiane SM | 3674 comments I have the same 4-star syndrome problem. And for much the same reason. I am unlikely to read a brand new book on a whim before it has gotten plenty of other reviews. So being choosy about the books I read means they are more likely to satisfy. That said, I find that books I rated when I first joined GR (in 2008), more strictly adhere to the official 5 star metric. Nowadays I’m much more likely to give good books a 4-star rating and excellent and masterful books 5 stars. 3 stars seems now to indicate something wrong enough to note. I wish I could bring myself to give more realistic star ratings, but I don’t want to negatively affect a book’s ability to draw people to reading it.


message 28: by a.g.e. montagner (new)

a.g.e. montagner (agem) | 667 comments I've been on different platforms that sometimes changed even their own rating systems, to say nothing of migrating cross platform: it would all have been a nightmare if I didn't have my own metric.

Honestly I do want to affect the reception of a book: if one was even partly disappointing I wish to give fair warning to other readers as well as my future self. In this sense I've become more strict about handing out four stars.


message 29: by Jan Mc (new)

Jan Mc (mcfitzsatx) | 25 comments a.g.e. montagner wrote: "Honestly I do want to affect the reception of a book: if one was even partly disappointing I wish to give fair warning to other readers as well as my future self....."

I agree very much with this, although I truly understand Diane's viewpoint, too (although I think it's much more applicable to Amazon than GR).

I count on other readers to give subjective but fair reviews so I don't waste my time on something I won't enjoy or learn from. Granted, my own, short reviews are mostly for my own record, so, grain of salt. I don't count on everyone agreeing, of course, but I'm much more likely to read a two-star rating than any other because I want to be warned.

Also, I wish more reviewers would include content warnings (gory violence, steamy sex, etc.).

Interesting conversation!


message 30: by Kaia (new)

Kaia | 660 comments I also have a similar 4 star rating issue for many of the same reasons. I’ve reached a point in life, too, where if I don’t like something, I stop reading, so I have very few books rated 1 or 2 stars. (I also don’t feel right rating a book I did not finish.) I tend to give something 5 stars if I really loved it, it was of outstanding quality (even if I did not love it - some Margaret Atwood books fall here for me), or I would recommend it freely to others. For me, 3 star books are usually ones that were okay or had some aspects that didn’t quite work.


message 31: by Melanie, the neutral party (new)


message 32: by DivaDiane (new)

DivaDiane SM | 3674 comments I was referring strictly to the star ratings, when I said I don’t want to negatively affect, but it’s still a bit silly. I know people who won’t bother with anything that has a star rating average of less than 3.8. I don’t really believe I have that much power to raise or lower an average. But hey, that’s my reasoning.

My reviews, on the other hand are always honest and fair. If there is something that didn’t sit well with me or rubbed me the wrong way, I will say so. My reviews are very personal though and brief. I don’t write book reports or do any synopsis at all. That’s what the blurbs are for.


message 33: by a.g.e. montagner (last edited Jan 12, 2025 09:11AM) (new)

a.g.e. montagner (agem) | 667 comments So they won't read Mrs Dalloway because it has an average of 3.79? Averages on Goodreads must be taken with a shipload of sea salt. There's a lot of hype for new books and an underappreciation of what I will unabashedly call the classics.

I try to be objective in my reviews as in my ratings, and I prefer to write longer, in-depth pieces, whenever I can. They are also for my personal record, mind you; I guess I'm just more demanding with myself!
But Diane, surely you've contributed to I don't know how many platforms that also include reviews?

Thanks Melanie for fishing out that vintage discussion; I believe we've had something similar more recently, which might have been on Discord though.

I'm also in the field of "it takes me so long to decide what to read and my wishlist runs in the hundreds, so by the time I actually start something I'm fairly sure it's my cup of tea, in my favourite china" (tea references are just warming up for more Radchaai reading coming up ahead).

Thanks Jan and welcome.
Perhaps unsurprisingly, folks over at Horror Aficionados say they dislike content warnings and even consider them as potential spoilers.


message 34: by CBRetriever (new)

CBRetriever | 6105 comments a.g.e. montagner wrote: "So they won't read Mrs Dalloway because it has an average of 3.79? Averages on Goodreads must be taken with a shipload of sea salt. There's a lot of hype for new books and an underap..."

in that particular case, a lot of casual readers would have problems with that book because it's stream of consciousness. I enjoyed it, but then I also enjoyed Ulysses.

I do have one book rated 5.0 that I've read:

Neighborhood Birding 101: An Identification Guide to Washington, Oregon & Northern California's Most Common Neighborhood Birds
and
Neighborhood Birding 101 - An Identification Guide to Washington, Oregon, & Northern California’s Most Common Neighborhood Birds

they're the same book and note the author's name


message 35: by a.g.e. montagner (last edited Jan 13, 2025 12:28AM) (new)

a.g.e. montagner (agem) | 667 comments The two books should be merged. I can do it, if you like.
edit: they are already merged, apparently.


message 36: by CBRetriever (new)

CBRetriever | 6105 comments a.g.e. montagner wrote: "The two books should be merged. I can do it, if you like.
edit: they are already merged, apparently."


excellent - maybe we have another goodreads editor here?


message 37: by a.g.e. montagner (new)

a.g.e. montagner (agem) | 667 comments I believe we are called librarians.

(on the previous point: the act of giving three stars to Mrs Dalloway says more about the reader than the novel).


message 38: by CBRetriever (new)

CBRetriever | 6105 comments a.g.e. montagner wrote: "I believe we are called librarians.

(on the previous point: the act of giving three stars to Mrs Dalloway says more about the reader than the novel)."


thanks - my brain has been in a fog lately and I couldn't remember the term to use.

and I was, rather obliquely, also saying it's a problem with the readers.


message 39: by a.g.e. montagner (new)

a.g.e. montagner (agem) | 667 comments Oh, you weren't oblique; I was just being obnoxious.

I'm the kind of lazy librarian who doesn't actively go looking for problems to solve, but is happy to fix anything that's pointed out.


message 40: by Cheryl L (new)

Cheryl L | 415 comments CBRetriever wrote: "a.g.e. montagner wrote: "I believe we are called librarians.

(on the previous point: the act of giving three stars to Mrs Dalloway says more about the reader than the novel)."

... also saying it's a problem with the readers"


I would be one of those problem readers and will not be reading Mrs. Dalloway. My brain is unable to parse stream-of-consciousness writing. If it were a sound, it would be static or white noise.


message 41: by a.g.e. montagner (last edited Jan 14, 2025 09:25AM) (new)

a.g.e. montagner (agem) | 667 comments As a graduate student of foreign literature I realise that my approach to literary fiction is probably different from most other readers'.

Luckily I can say that my experience teaching Woolf (and Modernism in general) has been overwhelmingly positive.
Cheryl, I would recommend Orlando, which also happen to have fantastical elements. The movie with Tilda Swinton is good, and I spent New Year's Eve a couple of years ago at the theatre production with Emma Corrin:
https://www.michaelgrandagecompany.co...


message 42: by CBRetriever (new)

CBRetriever | 6105 comments a.g.e. montagner wrote: "As a graduate student of foreign literature I realise that my approach to literary fiction is probably different from most other readers'.

Luckily I can say that my experience teaching Woolf (and..."


the one about the dog is good too: Flush:

This story of Elizabeth Barrett Browning’s cocker spaniel, Flush, enchants right from the opening pages. Although Flush has adventures of his own with bullying dogs, horrid maids, and robbers, he also provides the reader with a glimpse into Browning’s life.


message 43: by Cheryl L (new)

Cheryl L | 415 comments a.g.e. montagner wrote: "Luckily I can say that my experience teaching Woolf (and Modernism in general) has been overwhelmingly positive."

Ale, if I had you as my tutor, I could probably get through Mrs Dalloway and both not hate it and maybe even understand it.

Strangely, I had a similar problem with the last section of Absolution, which leaned heavily on stream-of-consciousness narration. The Southern Reach is notoriously difficult to understand as it is, but I was completely lost in the last section and ended up giving the book only 2 ⭐. In contrast, Annihilation was one of my 5 ⭐ reads from last year.

I've added the two recommended Woolf's to my TBR.


message 44: by Olga (new)

Olga Yolgina | 589 comments Cheryl L wrote: "Ale, if I had you as my tutor, I could probably get through Mrs Dalloway and both not hate it and maybe even understand it."

I'd join this class in a heartbeat :)


message 45: by a.g.e. montagner (last edited Jan 14, 2025 01:18PM) (new)

a.g.e. montagner (agem) | 667 comments Haha, thanks girls!
I'd be curious to try teaching to adults.
A colleague giving night classes says it has a different set of challenges.

The Southern Reach famously crashes after the first book, but... stream of consciousness right at the end? It sounds so shoe-horned it might actually be fun.
(curiously I was thinking about the movie a few days ago; specifically about the scene that uses CSN's "Helplessly Hoping").


message 46: by Olga (new)

Olga Yolgina | 589 comments a.g.e. montagner wrote: "Haha, thanks girls!
I'd be curious to try teaching to adults.
A colleague giving night classes says it has a different set of challenges. "


What ages do you teach?


message 47: by a.g.e. montagner (new)

a.g.e. montagner (agem) | 667 comments High school (14-19).
I could also teach in middle school (11-14), but I'd really rather not.


message 48: by Cheryl L (new)

Cheryl L | 415 comments a.g.e. montagner wrote: "High school (14-19).
I could also teach in middle school (11-14), but I'd really rather not."


Very few people want to be around people going through puberty, including their parents!


message 49: by a.g.e. montagner (new)

a.g.e. montagner (agem) | 667 comments ... and the youngsters themselves!
I remember being bored and impatient with myself at that age.


message 50: by Allison, Fairy Mod-mother (new)

Allison Hurd | 14221 comments Mod
Y'all make me laugh.

Also... 2025, SFFBC seminars? we read a book(s)/short stories / whatever our guest professor selects for a reasonable 1-2 month project and then get together and learn? EH??? EHHH??!?!?!


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