The Sword and Laser discussion

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The Hunger Games Trilogy Boxset
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THG: Anyone else not really enjoy these?
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But as a gateway read for younger audiences I'm in full support of the books. You can do much worse reading in the young adult reading section of the bookstore. I can understand why the books are popular for their intended audience.


While I enjoyed the first book, I just didn't care for the series overall due to books 2 and 3. I only somewhat enjoyed the 2nd book – it ha..."
Personally, I could not get into the Hunger Games either. I do like fantasy/scifi, both adult and ya, but this story just irritated me.


I know what you mean. Although it's very popular, I just couldn't get into it. I like ya fantasy too and discovered an indie book that is an interesting read: LightMasters: Number 13
I'll have to look into Garth Nix. Hope you find something you like.

Yeah, I agree.

This is exactly how I feel. I think my enjoyment of the first book was sullied by the second and third tomes. When I recommend the book to others, I always advise that they don't read the second and third books. The first book I thought was quite good and stood well on its own.

There are some young adult books that work for both adults and young adults, which is the sort I'm used to. But these books really seem to be just for young adults. And the bar was definitely set too high for these books.




Yeah, I hear a lot of people feel that way.

Could not agree with you more. Everyone needs to at least know of Ender's Game even if they are not going to read it one way or another. Its the best book ever written that was never intended to be used as widely as it is today

I haven't read Ender's game yet but that will be the only book I buy by Orson Scott Card. I don't believe in funding hate mongers.
http://io9.com/5838334/the-real-reaso...

I haven't read Ender's game yet but that will be the only book I buy by Or..."
If you feel that way about Orson Scott Card, then do you feel the same way about other political driven authors who show it in their writing like Terry Goodkind or Ayn Rand?

I haven't read Ender's game yet but that will be the only boo..."
Yes. At least in the case of the two you've mentioned. I don't share there point of view. I might read Ayn Rand just to know what I'm talking about when I discuss her philosophy with others but I'm not a fan.

I haven't read Ender's game yet but that will b..."
Then does the author has to have the same political beliefs as you do or is it just in general? Because I think most people on here hate Orson Scott Card, Terry Goodkind, and Ayn Rand because they have different or the opposite political beliefs as they do.

I haven't read Ender's game yet but that will b..."
Yes, I feel like if someone is in line with someone else's viewpoint whether its political or otherwise, even if the person displays it, they are more likely to use whatever the person has produced no matter what it is.

I haven't read Ender's game yet bu..."
I will, in general, avoid authors with political views that diverge significantly from my own. I would make it a more steadfast rule when they tend to preach it in their writings.


Not going to lie. That sentence is a bit muddled. Almost had to diagram it to understand it but I think I know what you are trying to say.


If you have that many authors you "significantly" disagree with then maybe you need to adjust your definition of "significant" to something with a higher threshold. When I said something about political views being significantly divergent from my own I meant more than one or two things. Besides the three listed here the only author I can think of avoiding because of difference in views was Michael Crichton later in his career. Heinlein held a lot of views very different from my own but the few books I've read by him I've found to be interesting none-the-less. As sean said its more the authors that become overly preachy in their books.


That makes sense. I dislike preachiness even if I happen to agree with an author's viewpoint. I pick up a book in hopes of a good story, not a political dissertation (or philosophical or religious or whatever.)

But isn't that what a lot of literature is about? Especially really good Sci-Fi literature.

That depends on the skill of the author or politician. If you are really good at making a argument in favor of a point of view you can change peoples minds in your favor but if you don't do a good job you can end up just turning people away from wanting to read what you've written all together. And if the author is really really good, they can tell a good story incorporating their point of view and people who disagree can just ignore it as fiction if they want. Very few authors do this well. Heinlein did a good job of this with Starship Troopers. He setup a society incorporating his view of how society should work but at the same time made it feel like a story immersed in a thought out and interesting world. I didn't agree with everything he said but I could appreciate some of his arguments. This is a far cry from promoting hate and distrust of a part of society as Card seems to have been doing recently.

in his books or in his private life? I have only read Ender's Game so I don't know if his other novels portrayed a more political or bigoted point of view. And if it was his personal life then I could see not buying his books but getting them on loan or some other way.
My question was more to the effect of isn't most great sci-fi work an allegory for a situation on our own world, in our own time? I would never not read something just because I heard it was preachy or that the authors view point was to skewed. I was always told that a lot of literature was intended to challenge our accepted notions of the world and try to make us see the world from a different point of view than our own.
We don't have to agree with the point the author was making but we should understand why we don't agree with it. To just not read something because we felt offended or that it didn't agree with our own preconceived notions would be an awful thing to happen in my opinion.
(we totally hijacked this thread by the way.)
back to the original point of the thread: I enjoyed all 3 books. I read them on audio from Overdrive and they all flowed quite easily for me. Some of the parts would annoy me (when Katniss would be so bullheaded for one) but then I would remember that the story is about a 16-17 year old girl who was thrust into this situation and could not do anything about it. Seen from that light everything in the books worked for me.

I agree with Nick's response: "if the author is really really good, they can tell a good story incorporating their point of view and people who disagree can just ignore it as fiction if they want." I expect an author's worldview to inform the stories she or he writes. That's one of the reasons I love good literature: I want the opportunity to see the world through someone else's eyes. I don't, however, particularly like opening a fiction book and finding passages of preachy essays thinly disguised as character dialogue or worldbuilding information.
And I probably shouldn't say much more, because I've contributed too much to this particular threadjack.

Just... just gonna let it all out there, eh?
Spoiler tag that, man.
Spoiler tag that, man.
Books mentioned in this topic
Number 13 (other topics)Battle Royale (other topics)
While I enjoyed the first book, I just didn't care for the series overall due to books 2 and 3. I only somewhat enjoyed the 2nd book – it had some good twists, but mostly more of the same from book 1 to me. Then I really struggled to finish the 3rd. It just didn't keep my interest at all.
I really began to loathe everything about Katniss not too much into the 2nd book. She was just too naive – it pained me that she couldn't even grasp what was going on in the present, much less try to put two and two together for the future. I just wanted to slap some sense into her.
Two things did not help: 1) I didn't realized these were written for "young adult" when I started the series and 2) I had recently listened to the entire A Song of Ice and Fire series and the Millennium trilogy. I believe this had a lot to do with me not enjoying the series – I just didn’t get sucked in. The bar was set too high with these other series.
Anyone else have these feelings? Again, I liked the first book, but I should have probably stopped there.