SciFi and Fantasy Book Club discussion
What Else Are You Reading?
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What are reading in 5/11?


I giggled like mad when I read that book.
I highly recommend th..."
I just finished the first today. I'll definitely be picking up the second soon.


Just finished that one! I really liked it! It kept me hooked.

I finished Journey to the Centre of the Earth. Obviously, some of the science is way out-dated, but it was a pretty good book. I like that it was much more restrained than that movie they made a few years ago.
Next up is Zoo City by Lauren Beukes.
Read Eona: The Last Dragoneye today.
Meh.
And now to do an eenie-meenie-mynie-mo to figure out what to read next...
Meh.
And now to do an eenie-meenie-mynie-mo to figure out what to read next...

I'll be honest, I wasn't a fan."
Me, either. A book with zombies in it shouldn't have so many dull spots.

I wasn't happy with it, for a book claiming a historical setting, it was remarkably bland and did a rotten job establishing and maintaining any believability that we were in Civil War America. (Characters speaking in a very modern voice, no real descriptions of the historical city, etc.)
Uh oh, sounds like I might be in for a rough read. I'm going to start reading it today.

Meh.
And now to do an eenie-meenie-mynie-mo to figure out what to read next..."
Yeah. I sort of liked Eon better than Eona. I didn't like the direction she took the story. I still enjoyed the writing, though. It was one of those books I didn't really know how to rate, 'cause I both sort of enjoyed it and didn't like it at the same time.
And I also was bored with Boneshaker.

I'm reading Sovay and enjoying it a lot. Yesterday I finished Feed by M.T. Anderson (this is the sf Feed vs. the zombie Feed) and I loved it until the end, where I wish the MC had acted differently.
Colleen ~blackrose~ wrote: "Yeah. I sort of liked Eon better than Eona. I didn't like the direction she took the story. I still enjoyed the writing, though. It was one of those books I didn't really know how to rate, 'cause I both sort of enjoyed it and didn't like it at the same time. "
The direction she took the story in was just awful. The love triangle was laughable. Sethon was just a cardboard cutout bad guy.
It was all so mediocre. It shouldn't have been, but it was.
The direction she took the story in was just awful. The love triangle was laughable. Sethon was just a cardboard cutout bad guy.
It was all so mediocre. It shouldn't have been, but it was.

My other issues were (view spoiler)
All-in-all I had such high hopes after the first one, and it was pretty disappointing. (I mean, the first book was far from perfect, but I thought it set up the potential for a kick-ass conclusion, and it just flopped.)

I have problems... )
Your spoiler is dead on, Colleen. I was thinking the same thing too.
And sorry Nicki. For what it's worth, ymmv?
And sorry Nicki. For what it's worth, ymmv?

I've never known a Mary Doria Russell book to not be, Genia. And I've read them all so far.
Nicki wrote: "Possibly -- my tastes usually seem to run opposite to everyone else's. ;) Love triangles are a real pet peeve, though."
My tastes seem to be opposite of Colleens on a lot of books. The fact we tend to agree with this one has me thinking it really is that bad or I've lost my mojo and my taste in books is off. :P
My tastes seem to be opposite of Colleens on a lot of books. The fact we tend to agree with this one has me thinking it really is that bad or I've lost my mojo and my taste in books is off. :P

I've never known a Mary Doria Russell book to not be, Genia. And I've read them all so far."
Dreamers of the Day. I was so disappointed I could cry - I practically did.
But aside from that? Definitely.



Oddly enough, when I read it a few years back, I was in the midst of a slump, and my mom went to a bookstore to try to find something I'd like. The clerk asked her what kind of books I like, and the only thing my mom could think of off the top of her head was "Stephen King" and "Harry Potter", right? So this clerk recommended that I read The Sparrow. Mom bought it and I read it, and I can only assume that the clerk thought that, based on my reading habits, I was possessed by the devil.
The Sparrow is very religiously flavored, but it is sci-fi and a bit dense, and somewhat brutal, but very interesting for all that. I just can't claim it's a favorite or anything. It's worth a read though, I'd say. :) I haven't read the sequel, Children of God though.
Or perhaps A Thread of Grace? But that's HF. I do have that one on my TBR.

Yeah... tres disappointing. And the more I talk about it, the more angry and annoyed I get with it. Heh.
So...
I am currently reading Mortal Coil by Derek Landy, book 5 in the Skulduggery Pleasant series, which is a fun, action-packed, but surprisingly dark MG series which I've been blowing through this week.
The writing is good - lots of wry humor and little quirky bits, the ante keeps being upped and I'm dying to know how everything turns out. The only negative, which I realized this morning, is that there's no real emotional connection to the characters. I mean, I like the characters, but I don't feel like I'm really there with them, in their heads or whatever.

I personally think A Thread of Grace is far better than Children of God, but yes, it's not sci-fi.

I meant "religiously flavored" as the main character is a Jesuit priest, a vocation that was specifically desired for the mission in the book. There is a distinct religious tone and feel to the book because of that. That's not a bad thing, but it is there.
Solaris may have a religious flavor for those who choose to see it, but I felt it was simply a philosophical sci-fi book. *shrug*
My mention of Harry Potter and Stephen King was simply an amusing anecdote. I read a lot of different types of books - I'll give anything a try, really. I'm not a genre reader. I liked The Sparrow, but it wasn't a favorite. :)

Is there any good sci-fi for people who don't like reading sci-fi 'cause it's boring?

Coleen: Depends on what other things they do read.
Pfft, I was snobby about the blurb for Eon, not that it was YA.
I'm a blurb Snob, get it right.
I'm a blurb Snob, get it right.

Ala - So sorry... It really was a terrible blurb, though. I can't fault you for that one.

So is Narnia... But those who aren't looking for those themes aren't likely to find them. One can read it as fantasy or religious allegory, depending on their perspective.
The Sparrow is different from that type of story. Again... not a bad thing. Just a fact.

Many of the main characters are Jesuits. I liked that about it a lot. I like reading religious sf. What books were you scarred by, Nicki?
I also quite enjoyed A Thread of Grace. I learned a lot from it, as I learned from The Sparrow, as well. While it's science fiction, they also tell the reader about Jesuits' experiences as explorers.
Colleen ~blackrose~ wrote: "Ala - So sorry... It really was a terrible blurb, though. I can't fault you for that one."
I think when it comes time for July SciFi nominations, I'm going to require people to actually include a blurb that doesn't suck in the nomination, or it won't count.
Some of the blurbs they have on GR just aren't very good.
Also, it seems I have The Sparrow on my TBR list already, and no idea when/why I added it. But this conversation has me intrigued enough I'll probably pick it up soonish to read this weekend.
I think when it comes time for July SciFi nominations, I'm going to require people to actually include a blurb that doesn't suck in the nomination, or it won't count.
Some of the blurbs they have on GR just aren't very good.
Also, it seems I have The Sparrow on my TBR list already, and no idea when/why I added it. But this conversation has me intrigued enough I'll probably pick it up soonish to read this weekend.

I like Octavia E. Butler's invented religions in Parable of the Sower and Parable of the Talents, to name two. They are also dystopian, so not for everyone. And the religion is one created by a child, so, not real sophisticated...

With OSC, you can read Ender's Game and skip pretty much everything else he's written. That's what I've done.

Narnia was written with a purpose to be a Christian allegory. The Sparrow was written with a mind to explore such questions as: why do bad things happen to good people?
Narnia is downright, outright, don't-doubt-it, Christian Fantasy. The Sparrow is not Christian. Hell, the writer's a convert to Judaism. She writes Jesuits as her main characters in the same way Walter M. Miller writes about monks in his A Canticle for Leibowitz (in fact, I know Russell was inspired by that book). Are you saying that's religious SF as well?
It seems funny to me to say this is more of a religious book than Narnia, considering Lewis's purpose, the way he'd written his books, and his entire world setup.
Nicki, I am not sure how it is remotely possible to construe The Sparrow as preachy, since it has no real point to preach. It's all one big question, so I suppose if you find the 'big questions' preachy, you won't enjoy it. I felt Children of God was a touch too definitive - to its vast detriment - but The Sparrow sins, if anything, with too much ambiguity, not too much certainty.

An adult convert to Christianity, Lewis had previously authored a number of works on Christian apologetics and other fiction with Christian themes. The character Aslan is seen by many as a fictionalized version of Christ.[46] Lewis did not initially plan to incorporate Christian theological concepts into his Narnia stories. Lewis maintained that the Narnia books were not allegorical, preferring to term their Christian aspects a "supposition".
Furthermore, when I first read 'The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe', back when I was still a good Catholic girl, I had no idea they were generally held to be regarded as Christian allegory. I just saw it as a fun fantasy story, and didn't think "Oh, Aslan's clearly a parallel for Christ", or any such thing.
And watching the movies as an adult I found myself saying "I don't really get how these are meant to be these heavy handed Christian allegories."
So, yeah, I would say that you can read Narnia without it being obviously, downright, outright, no-doubt-about it Christian Fantasy.
I've never read The Sparrow, so I can't comment on that. I will, however, say that since what one person finds obviously Christian another doesn't, it's equally possible for someone to find something preachy, even though someone else doesn't. It doesn't make that person wrong, it just means they have different perspectives.

Narnia was written with a purpose to be a Christian allegory. "
Genia, my saying that The Sparrow has a "religious flavor" isn't a slight or a criticism. It's an observation based on fact. One can tell that there is a religious flavor from reading the blurb on Goodreads alone. Here's a line from it: "The Jesuit scientists went to learn, not to proselytize. They went so that they might come to know and love God’s other children. They went for the reason Jesuits have always gone to the furthest frontiers of human exploration. They went ad majorem Dei gloriam: for the greater glory of God." Obviously, religion is a large and important part of the story.
Your argument regarding Narnia seems to me to be based on intent, which has nothing to do with what I'm saying. Whether Lewis intended Narnia to be allegory or not (and I don't know), it is still possible that a reader may not recognize it. Unless someone approaches the book with the knowledge of its being allegorical, or with an awareness to find additional meaning in what they read or see, etc, it is possible to miss the underlying meaning, regardless of the author's intent or how blatant its meaning may seem.
Allegories are dependent on interpretation and perception. A book in which religion is introduced into the story directly, which shapes and molds and identifies the characters and their beliefs and actions is not the same thing.
I'm not saying one is "more" religious than another. What I AM saying is that they are different types of books which contain religious references.
I did not, nor did I see anyone else, claim that The Sparrow was preachy. In fact, in message 136, I distinctly said that I did not think that it was.
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I giggled like mad when I read that book.
I highly recommend the sequel, Johannes Cabal the Detective as well, it's just as entertaining.