SciFi and Fantasy Book Club discussion
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Sandy
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Feb 19, 2011 09:51AM

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I'm a genre writer - for the screens & text - and I'm still deplorably unread in the areas I most ought to be. I need a group of wise and battle-hardened readers to guide me on the path! Very excited to be part of the community of story-lovers - on Goodreads in general, and the group in particular.
My wife & I relocated to London from L.A. four years ago and - except for the vicious withdrawal that comes around San Diego Comic-Con time - have taken to it like a duck takes to water, with the water mostly coming down out of the sky in great torrents of gray rain.
Secret Confession: Dune Messiah is actually my favorite Dune book.
For facts & figures, including police record, have a look at my website bio: http://www.nealromanek.com/bio/

My family moved to SoCal 15 years ago. Part of me considered it a betrayal of my principals, as those from Northern California, and specifically from San Francisco, regard anything south of Gilroy as suspect.
I loved all the Dune books. Maybe I'll reread the series.
By way of introduction, here's the bio from my web page:
http://sandynathan.com/about-sandy-na...
Here is the longer form which has all to dirt:
http://sandynathan.com/about_pop.html
Better read it fast. We're about to redo my site into one of those modern ones that consists of a picture of me and a buy button.
Happy Sunday, all!

That's where I live. Those topics were a focus for my MA in counseling. They informed my fist book, Stepping Off the Edge: Learning & Living Spiritual Practice All my sci-fi comes from the same font. It's a perfect combo. Most of the wild stuff in my first novel Numenon are simply write-ups of my meditation experiences. People call it sci-fi!
Sandy


Oh, well!
Hello, out there! My name's Krystle Jones, and like many of you, I'm an aspiring writer.
A little about me...
Originally from Tennessee, Krystle Jones is now living in Omaha, Nebraska pursuing a masters in flute performance. While an active performer, composer, and teacher, Krystle also loves to read and write, and is currently working on two novels - one, an epic two-part dark fantasy, and the other, a paranormal romance/urban fantasy trilogy - she hopes to publish someday. When she's not reading, writing, or playing the flute, Krystle can be found window shopping, sleeping, watching movies, or painting.
I joined Goodreads a few months back, but then lost touch with it for a while when school got busy (I'm in the last semester of my masters. Hallelujah!).
I'm still crazy-passionate about writing and reading, and I actually just started an interactive blog called The Word Obsession: http://thewordobsession.blogspot.com/.
I love meeting and chatting with fellow writers, so please drop me a line sometime! =)
Hiyas Krystle.
Not a writer myself, but welcome anyway :P
Not a writer myself, but welcome anyway :P


How did I get started reading SF? Blame it all on the NYC public library. I was working my way through the fiction section in the children's library at my local branch, when I encountered Isaac Asimov's David Starr series. I was hooked!
I read real books, and e-books on my Nook, or my phone, or on my PC.




I'm Karen Wyle, in south central Indiana, and new to Goodreads. I've been reading science fiction for more than 40 years, and am now revising my first sci fi novel (working title: Twin-Bred). I've read some fantasy, including Piers Anthony's Incarnations of Immortality series and Pullman's wonderful Dark Materials trilogy. My favorite type of science fiction (also the type I'm now writing) is sociological, although I also enjoy stories that play around with time travel. The day I met my husband, we spent 2 hours talking mostly about Robert Heinlein. :-)
Welcome, Karen :)
What's your novel about?
What's your novel about?

What's your novel about?"
Thanks for asking! I guess the best way to answer is to quote from my pitch:
Interspecies diplomacy begins in the womb.
Humans have lived on the Tofa’s planet for 70 years, but they still don’t understand the Tofa. They don’t know whether the Tofa understand humans. But they fear for the future. The next infuriating, inexplicable incident may be the one that explodes into war.
Scientist Mara Cadell has a radical proposal: host mothers would carry fraternal twins, one human and one Tofa. Perhaps such twins could provide a breakthrough in interspecies understanding. Mara has a special interest in twins: her own fraternal twin, Levi, died in utero. Mara also has a secret: she has kept Levi alive in her mind as companion and collaborator, cherishing his irreverence, cynicism, and political acumen.
The Tofa agree to cooperate with the project. No one is sure whether they understand its purpose. But the Tofa have their own agenda. And then there is the human faction that sees the project as a means to a very different end.
As the youngsters grow, they are full of surprises. One of these presents Mara with both a crisis and an opportunity: the Tofa twins can perceive and even channel Levi’s presence. Meanwhile, the time approaches for the Twin-Bred to fulfill their destiny.
The Twin-Bred were born to bring peace to their two peoples. But has their unique upbringing left them too different, too alien, to achieve this goal? And is it what the human and Tofa communities really want?
So her brother's soul/consciousness is part of her? Or some form of split personality?
Either way, sounds interesting.
Either way, sounds interesting.



I'm an applied mathematician, currently masquerading as a theoretical physicist at one of my university labs. I'm 29 and going back to school, hopefully to start my masters program next year.
I've read sci-fi since I was a kid reading HG Wells Time Machine. I must confess the more and more math and physics I learn the harder it is for me to take on a less than plausible world in sci-fi. Although I have read lots of Fantasy in high school, I tend to like Sci-Fi more these days. Although I don't read very much fiction these days... lots of my time is consumed with non-fiction. Oh well, I still love sci-fi when I make the time for it though!

Applied mathematician... *drools* I love math! I was going to major in applied mathematics but ended up doing mechanical engineering instead.

Applied mathematician... *drools* I love math! I was going to major in applied mathematics but ended up doing mechanical engineering instead."
A friend of mine is a really brilliant Mechanical engineer. He works at the same lab as me building equipment.
I couldn't do mechanical engineering, I think building the stuff you people do is really cool. I just don't enjoy hands on building. I also don't like doing experiments. I'm way more into building theoretical models haha. Lots of people make fun of me for it: P


Live in Marina Del Rey, California. Happily married, but the Sea is forever my mistress.



Oh I know what Six Sigma is! Sounds like you're doing it right though. management tries to apply it to people... which doesn't really work out the same way necessarily.


Yeah they actually try to apply Six Sigma at a business level to personnel. It's very goofy stuff, but it makes managers feel good or something. I have no idea. Humans aren't a scientific process that is very easily quantified.

I strongly recommend The City and The City - very interesting concept and compelling reading. The Windup Girl by Paolo Bacigalupi is also a fantastic read. Very relevant to current geo political issues.

Presently, I'm a bit apprehensive about matters relating to the safety of people's Biometrics and DNA data that are being archived by various world governments. The thriving human organ black market also makes me paranoid. What can be done when human organs are being rated as commodities that are being traded for profit?
Welcome Akintunde :)
What exactly does Lifecare Foundation do?
What exactly does Lifecare Foundation do?

I got into reading SF/Fantasy from my Dad. I used to study the covers of his books like "Prince of Dogs" by Kate Elliott and I thought it looked so cool and wanted to read it when I got older.
I read mainly Fantasy and historical fiction. I'm looking forward to finding some new good books.
Hiyas Kelly :)
Can you see Russia from your house?
Can you see Russia from your house?

Can you see Russia from your house?"
No unfortunately not. I must not go to the right area of Wasilla. Our first day in Anchorage was the same day Palin was announced as candidate for vice-pres. It was surreal.



You obviously haven't met any of the engineers where I work. Weird, different -sure. Humorless? No way. Just the opposite, too often. I finally convinced them to quit doing computer tricks since I often had to fix them.

I am medical writer by day, fiction translator by night and an avid SF/F fan. My taste on fantasy is heavily tipped to Terry Pratchett side of the scale rather than Tolkien, and my SF taste is prone to Asimov and Bujold rather than Clarke.
Welcome Teena, what language do you translate fiction into?
Hiyas Lori, English prof, eh? Well, we can't all be perfect I guess :P
Hiyas Lori, English prof, eh? Well, we can't all be perfect I guess :P

My taste tend to lean toward dytopias and alternate history. End of the world, alien invasions, all good stuff. But I also read a lot that isn't sci-fi at all... pretty voracious reader.
I also write, have written a couple novels (one war related, one alt-history) and working on a sequel.
What else? Live in Atlanta, Georgia, where I run a restaurant by day and collapse into an exhausted sleep by night.
Nice to meet you all!
Charles
Hiyas Charles.
BBQ: sauce or rub?
BBQ: sauce or rub?
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