SciFi and Fantasy Book Club discussion
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I read The Mysterious Benedict Society. Older son didn't like it, and I didn't think to recommend it to the younger one. I'll check out the others you recommend.
Keep the ideas flowing!

Have you/they read The Chronicles of Prydain? Those are good. I'm assuming (and you know what they say about that LOL) that you're already aware of the Narnia books.

Read the extremely long Author Interview here.
Yes, it's an author interview but it's got WAY more personal information than your typical author interview. I think you might be surprised :)
-Friday
@phoenicianbooks
Author of Conditioned Response A SciFi Thriller to Remember - If You Can!

My three favorite writers (other than the great god Shakespeare) in no particular order are F. Scott Fitzgerald, Cordwainer Smith and Raymond Chandler.
Oh, and where can I flog my books?



Definitely promote in the Authors folder here. Create a "new topic" (link is on the right just above the words "view last activity") for yourself/your book(s) and be sure to stick to the one thread (don't make 5 topics for one book but I just noticed the mods specifically said to make a separate topic for each book - he phrased it as "don't put more than one book per thread)
Nick (one of the mods) has posted a cautionary note to Authors here which it cannot hurt you to read before you post and of course he also put rulez into the Authors folder itself - read the rulez before you create your topic.
I think the general rule of this group or any other on Goodreads:
1) don't be obnoxious
2) don't just fly-by sales pitch -- that is showing up just to speak to people in the threads exclusively to shove your books down their throats -- and
3) don't be incessant about it
Keep to that general behavior and no one will mind if you mention your book in passing (just not a passing SALES pitch ;-) a passing mention "Oh I wrote about about that")
@B.P. - I don't know if I'll like the new Snow White movie because I seriously do NOT like the Twilight girl but Charlize Theron on screen can obliterate any negative that twit brings with her pity me pity me looks. It's the same as the whiny look Linda Hamilton had UNTIL she finally got serious about being a strong woman in T2 (haha).
Charlize is...unparalled. Princess Grace was the last lady of Charlize's caliber of beauty, elegance, class and raw acting ability. I could watch Charlize Theron perform in anything and like it. I simply could not believe it was really her in Monster until I saw her smile in the makeup. They had to put so much ugly onto her to make her just "plain" I'll never forget it but her personality comes through when she smiles.
I didn't know Charlize was in Prometheus until I saw her promoting Snow White and she mentioned it in passing (doing promo for both flicks at once) I wasn't going to see Prometheus b/c I hate the whole horror/scifi genre of film (the Aliens movies did nothing for me but make me like Sigourney Weaver LESS) but now that I know Charlize is in it, might at least Netflix it.
-Friday
@phoenicianbooks

But the take off: 'Vampires Suck' is hilarious! Recommended for non-sparklies.
And yes, I agree, Charlize is a brilliant actress!
And yes, I agree, Charlize is a brilliant actress!

You meant "Alien versus Predator" by "avp" right? :) Amazing that I don't watch the movies yet I know the titles even in acronym (LOL) I think the reason I don't like them is that there's absolutely no scientific basis for anything. It's pure visual representation of some nightmare imagery that some special FX guys and animatronics crews thought up. And that's good--for something like PLANET OF THE APES :) I dunno, for aliens, I kind of want to see something that is either NOT anthropormophic or IS but the bugs who stand up on hind legs and walk and talk like humanoids and use fore "arms/legs/tentacles" like human arms is ridiculous -- evolutionarily speaking.
Other than the Apes franchises (of which I became a fan as a kid way back when Charlton Heston cursed the very first "damned dirty ape") I can't actually think of any current aliens that seem remotely plausible. Plus the Aliens and Predators movies are really just there for the slime factor, the splatterpunk shockers and the suspenseful tension that makes your heart skip a beat. I guess I've just been terrorized by real life terrors (you know, WAR, crime, that kind of stuff where people actually DIE and do not get up when someone says "cut!") enough that I don't really need to pay money to be terrorized. My heart does not need to race more than it does. Unless I'm on the elliptical machine (haha)
-Friday
@phoenicianbooks

..."
J.D. Hallowell here. I'm another 1950's proto-nerd, and since I'm too old and beat up to do much real-life adventuring these days, if I'm not writing or spending too much time on line, I'm reading SF and Fantasy. I look forward to hanging out here and talking about books.
Julie, I'd agree with most of Mike's suggestions, and add L'Engle's A Wrinkle in Time series, The Wind in the Willows, and the Redwall books. A lot of Isaac Asimov's stuff is fine for kids, and some of Heinlein's "juveniles" would work, too, although a few of them are probably better left until later. This list has some good suggestions, although I still recommend pre-reading if your child is very sensitive.

This group seemed to match my interests well. I have been a science fiction fan since I found Ray Bradbury my freshman year of high school. In college someone recommended Piers Anthony's science fiction work (Macroscope and his trilogy Orn, OX, and Omnivore)and I was hooked. Lately I mainly juggle between fantasy and science fiction books. I just finished 1Q84 and loved it. I hadn't read anything by Murakami before, but I may pick more of his work. I am also listening to audiobooks of David Farland's Runelord series.
I look forward to hearing what others are reading!

I would recommend Jenny Nimmo's work about a boy named Charlie Bone. It is a series and I think the first book is called Midnight for Charlie Bone. Similar to Harry Potter, but with different twists. These are kids who discover they are "gifted." The stories also has the element of good vs. evil. I read them and thoroughly enjoyed Nimmo's work.
Suzanna Collins has gotten tremendous attention for The Hunger Games, but she has been writing for awhile. Her earlier series is about Gregor, a boy living in New York City who discovers there is a whole world underneath the city in the book, Gregor, the Overlander. It is an outstanding series, better in my opinion than The Hunger Games series.

I don't have kids so I haven't really been involved in this whole thing but this caught my eye. I actually REMEMBER this series being profiled on a news show a few years ago. It sounded like such an interesting concept for a YA series. I had no idea it was the same author. She definitely has a wild imagination. I think the whole Hunger Games media blitz is more the media's doing than hers though that kind of publicity sure does sell books ;-)
-Friday
@phoenicianbooks




You mean..."
If you find current alien characters implausible, then I suggest the alien character in The Metalmark Contract, my novel about a visit from an advanced life form to Earth. The alien's forms and life cycle are quite original and based on science. A review is at http://lnkd.in/5FrasD I hope you enjoy it!

I'm actually an artificial person, created in the fevered imagination of a geek who's too timid to come out and face the light on his own. I'm also his pen name. Oh, the indignity, but I'm cursed with it and it's my burden to bear.
However, I'll press on and try to share my literary likes and dislikes while enjoying those of all y'all.

Oh, welcome to the group, I think.

Oh, welcome to the group, I think."
Thank you.
No, if I take over the world, it will be as myself, not that wimp who dreamed me up. He hasn't the balls to pull something like that off.


Curses, foiled again!
I’ll have to figure some way to escape permanently. Perhaps grow my own body from scratch into one that’s just like me (6’ 4”, wall-to-wall muscles, full head of hair, square commanding jaw, and a smile that melts the hearts of the most georgious women around while demanding the respect of men). Then I’ll just take that body over and achieve my goals. Haaaahaaahaaaaaahahahahahaaaaa!
Oops! Sorry about that. Did I hurt anyone?

We paladins need opponents.
By the way, have you read Heroes Die? There's a guy in it that takes his body and changes it into about what you want. Of course he seems to have had to get a bunch of magic items and then make some terrible magic deal...but hey, what self respecting aspiring Evil Overlord would flinch at that?

Oops! Sorry about that. Did I hurt anyone?
"
No, it's cool. I knew from the description in your monologue that I'd be the obvious target in your plot to get a DNA sample to use for your body clone, so I was prepared for the attack. I may be left with a few minor scars, but they'll only serve to enhance my already commanding presence, and I destroyed all the tissue samples, even the ones you thought you'd hidden.
No harm, no foul.
Oh, and take Mike's advice, and read the Evil Overlord list, if you haven't yet.

I've always loooooved that list, Mike :) the only thing "better" is "Dating Your Publisher." Spew alert before clicking. My favorite, though, might be getting a bit out of date now:
You say: 'I self-publish/post on the internet, and I've had some good feedback.'
Dating equivalent: 'The prostitutes I sleep with tell me I'm good in bed.'
ROTFLMAO, and if you're not also, you just haven't slept with the prostitutes I have--I mean read the books I have...erm, written? I forget, what was I supposed to say to you again? :-)

Sorry, haven't read the Evil Overlord list.
Never said I wanted to take over the world. That's my story and I'm sticking to it, officer.


And you should make absolutely sure that you aren't eating or drinking anything when you read it.

Inspired! Thanks. I'll take the suggestions to heart.

Mind if I post it on Facebook?

Mind if I post it on Facebook?"
It's been floating around the internet for years, so I can't imagine that anyone at all would mind.

Nice to meet you all.

As I have started reading many, MANY of our beloved series when the writers were first published, I am now to the point of only desiring to read series that are completed. (I tired of waiting for the WoT books WAY before Mr. Jordan died. and that is just ONE example.
I also get very involved with the characters in books I read. Therefore, I tend to like books with more conversation than description (I can create my own pictures - but I crave people) (Ok so all my pictures look the same - but does that REALLY matter?)
I look forward to sharing adventures with y'all.

The work of Manly Wade Wellman, whose career spanned from the 1940s to the 1980. His stories starring the characters Judge Pursivant, John Thunstone and Silver John the Balladeer are a little hard to find but I think they're really great. I'm especially fond of the Silver John stories, since they're full of old-timey folk music and frequently based on Appalachian folklore.
Arthur Machen is the writer HP Lovecraft acknowledged as his biggest influence after Poe. Try THE GREAT GOD PAN or THE WHITE PEOPLE (AND OTHER STORIES).
Then there's Charles Williams, who did with horror and fantasy what CS Lewis did with kids' stories - use them as vehicles for Christian allegory. My favorites are ALL HALLOW'S EVE and WAR IN HEAVEN.



I've just finished Soul Searching by Keith Caserta. It's one of the best books I've ever read. It's what got me to join this group. I'm hoping for more like it, while waiting for the Soul Searching sequel. This book had great human characters, a brilliantly-conceived awakening computer, the Singularity, romance, a look at using technology to investigate the spiritual realm, and a plot that surprised me over and over again. It made me think about things in ways I never had. So if you have suggestions for anything like it PLEASE LET ME KNOW!
I took a break from SciFi because I don't know what to pick next. I'm currently reading a time travel romance (very light SciFi by comparison to the other book) called Threaded Through Time.


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Books mentioned in this topic
Rosewater (other topics)The Song of Achilles (other topics)
The Eye of the World (other topics)
Gardens of the Moon (other topics)
The Fated Sky (other topics)
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Authors mentioned in this topic
Varun Sayal (other topics)Stanley Schmidt (other topics)
Margaret Atwood (other topics)
Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley (other topics)
Roald Dahl (other topics)
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They may have read some of those of course, but hope it helped. Welcome.