The Sword and Laser discussion
Does this forum and S&L skew your view on a book?
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I've seen it a number of times across a number of groups.
I'll have to go back and look at the Blindsight discussions. I adored the book and the fact that one of the characters was called a "vampire" was insignificant to me, where his behavior and role he played in the group was significant.


I do the same. Once I'm done, though, I do sometimes look at other reviews before I write mine. My goal in doing that isn't to change my opinion, but to see if anybody else points out something I may have missed that might alter my perception. So far, I haven't had an experience where someone has changed my mind, but I have come to an understanding why others might feel a certain way about a book.

I agree totally with your thoughts here, this is what I do also, and if I like or dislike something im not easily swayed away from that opinion, im stubborn lol

That is sort of the point I was getting at though. If you didn't naturally come to or see a point and you do see something that alters your opinion after the fact, is it in fact skew your view on a book?

I think reading discussions don't so much skew my view of a book, but they can serve to expand my view. Which, to me, is the point of a book-club or discussion group, to expand your horizons while sharing your own unique viewpoint with others to help them to expand theirs.

Isn't that the point of a book group? To get perspectives and insights that would never have occurred to you as an individual reader? Heaven knows my reactions to the Magicians was significantly moderated by others' resistance to my initial critiques. Tom's got me halfway to rethinking Grossman's book. We'll see if Grossman himself can finish the job.

I wasn't too clear in my statement and should have added "to the point where most other aspects of the book get ignored".
I've seen it happen many places online (not just here and not just Goodreads) and IRL. It happens. I suspect its human nature to gravitate to where a discussion is most active.

I don't think that getting a better understanding of other viewpoints (especially for things in books that I don't like) is the same as skewing my opinion...Though I guess there is some semantics there.

I think that the thing I love about this group is the diversity of perspectives and special insights the members have into any given work.
I have been turned on to some totally great UK writers not named Joe Abercrombie thanks to people like Ala and others....
Perhaps some of the other points of the book do get shouted down sometimes....but I think the loathing of vampires in space was far worse than the Quentin effect on the Magicians discussion....

What I noticed about what changed for me is that these discussions and writing about the books in this forum makes me think more about a book. If I'd just read The Magicians for myself I'd have probably thought "Yeah, was okay" and put it away. Discussing it with others reading and writing on this forum here made me realize exactly what I liked and what I didn't like about the book and that is an interesting effect.

The downside to that is that by the time I'm ready to discuss the book, it's all been said and done already, and there are four threads that express my opinion and four others that express the opposite and everyone has moved on.
Does anyone else feel we may have a bit of group-think occurring during any of the book discussions? Did other people feel as passionately about the Magicians before coming to the boards and seeing where people are weighing in? Is the discussion coloring what may be your "natural" takeaway when reading a story?