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Quest to read every joint Hugo-Nebula winner
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I checked it out, and I have read 4 of them, American Gods, The Windup Girl, Dune and now Rendezvous With Rama.
I have about 7 others in my TBR, some of them in a pile by my bed! lol
That can be a theme nomination for next month! I really have been trying to get to both The Yiddish Policemen's Union and Neuromancer
I have about 7 others in my TBR, some of them in a pile by my bed! lol
That can be a theme nomination for next month! I really have been trying to get to both The Yiddish Policemen's Union and Neuromancer

I have read 7 of them off the list.
American Gods, Ringworld, Gateway, Forever War, Speaker for the Dead, Dune and Enders Game.


I've read only 4 of these thus far: Dune, Ender's Game, Doomsday Book, and American Gods. Other than those four, I own (but have yet to read) The Left Hand of Darkness, The Dispossessed, Dreamsnake, and Blackout. Everything on the list interests me but Speaker for the Dead, the sequel to Ender's Game, which I didn't care for, and I'd be happy to read all the selections from the list but that one.



My goal is to finish the entire list by next year since I only have 17 left. I will easily finish my 20 book challenge this year so maybe I'll push for 25 next year.
Beyond the Hugo-Nebula list, I think it would be great to go back farther and read the true classics of the genre from Jules Verne, H G Wells, Mary Shelley and others like that. Anyone have that as a shelf? Should we create a list?
The clasics is one of our focuses here in Sci-Fi Afficionados...the issue is everyone has a different idea what classics are!
Maybe that is something we could all do-make a sci-fi afficionado "Classic must-reads' list
Maybe that is something we could all do-make a sci-fi afficionado "Classic must-reads' list




I'd be up for that.
i like the idea of having a monthly Classic Read, but i think it should replace Theme Read not Random Read. the Random pick allows group members so much freedom of choice (and nomination)... this would also eliminate the need to gather Theme nominations beforehand, at least for a little while.
great list! i think that between the Masterworks, the Hugos, and the Nebulas, we'll have plenty of options. we could possibly just go list by list, putting up a dozen or so on a poll at a time. or - perhaps even better - we could just refer folks to any of those three lists of books as the source of all nominations for Classic Scifi.



The joint Hugo-Nebula thing is great, I've managed to read 15 so far, got one on the shelf to be read, and one to be bought on my next shopping trip (second half of a joint winner, bloody publishers).
Let us all know what order and when you read them so we can all chip in or join in.
I'm also game for the theme reads to take a back seat for a while to play with things like Masterworks, Classics (lots of good natured debate in there) and Award lists.
IIRC there's a stagnated Goodreads group set up just for the Masterworks series. I'll see if I can find it.
Found it. It's here

Remember to enjoy Paladin of Souls, you probably need to read vol 1 The Curse of Chalion first.
I've read six that I've rated, but I'm sure there's a couple more that I read years ago where I remember, but can't remember the story...

I've read a few (list is at home) Dune and American Gods being two of them. Neil Gaiman holds a very special place in my heart, because Neverwhere was the first adult novel that I had ever read. American Gods is such a great book too. I love the premise, especially since I'm a huge fan of mythology.
Dune might just be one of the best works ever written in my opinion. I was just blown away by it. I have to admit though, that I was disappointed in the subsequent novels.
Ender's Game is excellent as well. I miss that OSC.
And Anne McCaffrey- I've read every book in the Pern series, and have a few cd's of music based off of the books (really enjoyable stuff). I think Todd is doing a well enough job continuing on.
First book I'm going to read once I'm done with whats on my kindle (which unfortuantely is the first book in the Wheel of Time series, and the first book in the Mistborn series) I'm going to read Philip K. Dick. All the sudden my friends started talking about him, a rediscovery we'll say, and now I just have to read it!



The Goodreads list link is here:
http://www.goodreads.com/list/show/62...
If you'd like to use my shelf to make adding a SF Masterworks shelf go faster, help yourself. The link to my shelf:
http://www.goodreads.com/review/list/...

The Goodreads list link is here:
http://www.goodreads.com/lis..."
Thanks for that. Don't think I'll put all of them on my shelves yet, though - that's an awful lot of books. (kinda like having a reading list jiminy cricket...)
(btw, I thought I had a lot of shelves, but they're nothing compared to yours...)

Thank you for bringing up the idea...




My shelf:
http://www.goodreads.com/review/list/...
Goodreads list:
http://www.goodreads.com/list/show/21...

I was in the mood for research, so I ran the numbers on your list, looking for that extra book. It seems the Goodreads list was added to by folks voting for books they think should have won but did not. (or something)
I am using the list of Hugo winners for Best Novel posted by Locus as a reference. They haven't yet updated with the 2011 winner(s), Blackout & All Clear.
- If you are only listing the winners for Best Novel, your entry for Coraline: Graphic Novel is extraneous and may account for the extra book.
- Scalzi's Old Man's War & The Ghost Brigades aren't winners, either. Old Man's War was nominated and a finalist, but it did not win.
- Coraline (the non graphic novel form) won for Best Novella, not Novel; I don't know if you are integrating both lists here, but it seems like the list would be much longer if that were your intention.
- Oddly, your list has two entries for The Fountains of Paradise, one with 0 pages. (?)
- Also not Hugo winners: The Player of Games & The Persistence of Vision
- Flowers for Algernon won in the Novelette category, not novel.
- Believe it or not, Fahrenheit 451 did not win a Hugo in its competitive year, but it was awarded a Retro Hugo later on - in 2004!



Ive read/listened to these so far. Gateway, Ringworld, Rendezvous with Rama.
And I have about ten of em on my bookshelf waiting to be read.

Hmm... I see the Locus list has 59...then we add Blackout and All Clear, making 61. I think the Bradbury Retro Hugo for F451 is the issue, as it's not on the Locus list but is on yours. (The Retro Hugos can be found on Wikipedia's Hugo Winners page and could always legitimately be added to any Hugo novels list but are not part of the official "core.")


Connie Willis wrote them to be one book, but it was looooong, and (from what I read) her publisher thought it best (read: most profitable) to split it and release it as two volumes a year apart. Thus the story stops rather unnaturally at the end of Blackout.
Edit to add: So technically it IS one book, but there's no way to shelve it as such until/unless a single-ISBN version is released...and the Hugo committee waited til both volumes were released and took the story as a whole, which jives with Ms. Willis's preference. But it messes up all attempts at organization! ;)
Books mentioned in this topic
The Fountains of Paradise (other topics)Flowers for Algernon (other topics)
Old Man's War (other topics)
The Persistence of Vision (other topics)
The Player of Games (other topics)
More...
Thanks!