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Safest Intro books?
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Allison, Fairy Mod-mother
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Nov 01, 2020 03:55PM

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I think it really depends on what flavor of book the reader is curious about as there's such a broad range within either of the two categories. But since we can't ask them their favorite books to get a sense of their taste, I'd probably go with the following, trying for surefire hits as one bad first example could sour them on the genre in general:
SF: The Martian
Fantasy: The Name of the Wind
Both are very approachable, written recently enough that the style is very modern and have high Goodreads ratings (basically both around 4.5 with 750K+ ratings).

The Hobbit for fantasy
you would want a fairly simple book without an extended number of characters and branching plots, especially if they're an alien

The Hobbit for fantasy"
That's pretty much where I started over 50 years ago.
Christopher, good point with LoL, although I think the format is more of an issue than the story. Your picks are excellent, though.

For SciFi that is tough, maybe The Andromeda Strain - another early one for me.


Rip Van Winkle: Rip Van Winkle. Sit back and watch his head explode.


For Fantasy I have to agree that The Lord of the Rings has got to be the logical place to start.

Thinking of a first contact scenario: def nothing with (main focus on) war or conflict between two separate factions to give new ideas or fester preconceived notions in our alien friend's head.
My first thought is to introduce them to something dealing with human* inner conflicts, to show our cerebral capability and methods of reasoning.
*(Or, most likely in AI inner conflicts, since that's often the way of SF - such ruminations usually do involve some element of 'lording over ones creator' as well, but with proper rational context it could be a beneficial caveat: "this is how we can think, too, but are capable of not acting on such thoughts"). It has it's complications, too, but: When H.A.R.L.I.E. Was One: Release 2.0?
Something dealing with taking care of our offspring / each other; The Human Son?
And definitely introduce them to books in several languages, to reach beyond inherent thought pattern limitations of one language alone.
Eventually, Le Guin The Dispossessed?

In addition to The Martian and Name of the Wind, I'd recommend:
- Skyward (universal appeal, family-friendly, lovable characters and fast pace)
- All Systems Red
- The Ocean at the End of the Lane
- Momo
- Kindred

and it needs to be something that would immediately grab their interest. As much as I love LotR, it takes quite a while to get going. Harry Potter might be simple enough - I'm not a big fan of the book, but it did get a lot of kids into reading who normally wouldn't read books
I agree with Eva about the classics. I haven't read LOTR and have absolutely no desire to for those reasons.
Playing it safe I'd recommend basically anything by Brandon Sanderson or Martha Wells. A treasure trove of inoffensive, enjoyable, and not overly challenging stories.
Playing it safe I'd recommend basically anything by Brandon Sanderson or Martha Wells. A treasure trove of inoffensive, enjoyable, and not overly challenging stories.

Even though Robin Hobb's writing tends to be difficult for me to digest (English isn't my first language). I got more used to it as I went on reading.


that was my suggestion too

For SF? I think I'd recommend Wool Omnibus and Ancillary Justice as great modern SF and second the Dispossessed and Way Station for classics.

From relatively early in her long career, I would suggest the Time Agents stories, beginning with "Time Traders," although its Cold War opening is dated. (But less so than a few years ago, given Putin's Russia.)
A lot of them are YA/Adult, depending on the level on which you want to read them. The hardcover editions usually went into the juvenile sections of libraries, based on how the publishers marketed them, but in most cases the paperback reprints and originals were aimed a science fiction (and later fantasy) readership that very much included adults.
The early Witch World (alternate world / fantasy) stories definitely aren't for younger children, with the threat of rape as a theme in a couple of them: they were originally paperback only. The later "The Jargoon Pard," one of her many stories about growing up "different" might be a good choice, although it interlocks with other books which provide considerable background, which makes it easier to follow. (On the other hand, they can be considered spoilers for it.)

That aside, let's see. Tolkien may not be my thing, but he might be Rip's because of the writing style. Or any fantasy author who is more elaborate on the prose side. On the other hand, since he's a salt of the earth type, maybe he'd like something that's more grounded like an urban fantasy. Ilona Andrews?
As for the alien, what might their culture be like? Maybe they'd go for something inclusive like The Long Way to a Small, Angry Planet. Something with lots of other aliens in it. Maybe the alien came from thousands of light years away and has just awakened from a very long cold sleep. Children of Time, that has aliens and evokes a large scale of time, might be a good choice to show that we understand them.

I think Mistborn and The Martian were good starting points, but I wouldn’t start with Hitchhiker’s Guide if I were to go at it again.

For Sci-fi:
All System Red (Murderbot Diaries) - Great main character with some soft Sci-fi. Recently got my fiancé reading with this one (well listening to it on audible).
Or
Jurassic Park - loved this book and it made so much more sense than the movie!
For Fantasy:
Name of the wind - I think it has a very grounded sense of magic and everything is well explained. I also think the concept of the main character narrating there own mythical tale to be really well executed.
For Both (kinda)
Off to be the wizard - Time Traveling Wizards that reads like a DND game where a Pro is teaching a New player. I’m not doing it justice here but I recommend as a light hearted sci-fi-fantasy story.
Books mentioned in this topic
The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy (other topics)The Martian (other topics)
Mistborn: The Final Empire (other topics)
The Long Way to a Small, Angry Planet (other topics)
Children of Time (other topics)
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