SciFi and Fantasy Book Club discussion

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Members' Chat > Recommendations? Funky/weird/fun

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message 1: by Kelly (Maybedog) (last edited Dec 06, 2008 01:48AM) (new)

Kelly (Maybedog) (maybedog) Hi,

Currently I'm exceedingly broke and my parents would kill me if I spent any money on them, so I'm doing something a little different for my step dad for Christmas/Solstice: I'm putting together a list of book ideas that he might like with synopses, reviews, etc. I was hoping you all could help me out with ideas. He likes weird and quirky books.

The two books he read most recently and loved were Matt Ruff's Bad Monkeys [ Jane Charlotte has been arrested for murder. She tells police that she is a member of a secret organization devoted to fighting evil; :]and Door Number Three by Patrick O'Leary [Just when you thought nothing new could be done with time travel, lucid dreaming, alien abduction, shapeshifting, and World War III, along comes Patrick O'Leary, fusing them in a grand, sardonic comedy of consensual reality gone awry.:] I'm pretty sure he'll love Jennifer Government [In the horrifying, satirical near future of Max Barry's Jennifer Government, American corporations literally rule the world. Everyone takes his employer's name as his last name.:] and I think he would love Snow Crash [It is a world where the Mafia controls pizza delivery, the United States exists as a patchwork of corporate-franchise city-states, and the Internet--incarnate as the Metaverse--looks something like last year's hype would lead you to believe it should.:]

So, any ideas of books he might like? Thank you in advance.


message 2: by Imperfectlyrua (new)

Imperfectlyrua Castle | 15 comments I'd look into Good Omens if he likes some comedy in his weird and wacky. Also Jasper Fford's Thursday Next books might be worth a look. And if he likes Lovecraft at all or spy/mysteries with a with a spin to the bizarre check out Atrocity Archives by Charles Stross.


message 3: by Sandi (new)

Sandi (sandikal) Vacation by Jeremy Shipp would probably fit the bill.


message 4: by Sandi (new)

Sandi (sandikal) Argh! I can't believe I didn't think of Connie Willis!


message 6: by Laurel (new)

Laurel Anything by A. Lee Martinez! He takes traditional fantasy motifs and turns them into sweet satire. They're highly addictive!


message 7: by Jensownzoo (new)

Jensownzoo | 200 comments Tom Holt novels are pretty quirky.


Kelly (Maybedog) (maybedog) These are all great! I definitely think he'll like To Say Nothing of the Dog and the Thursday Next novels. I liked those, too. I have a Tom Holt novel I haven't read so I'll look at that and all these other suggestions. Thanks so much! (And keep 'em coming!)


message 9: by Natalie (new)

Natalie (natshellok) | 1 comments Kelly wrote: "Hi,

Currently I'm exceedingly broke and my parents would kill me if I spent any money on them, so I'm doing something a little different for my step dad for Christmas/Solstice: I'm putting togeth..."


Would Gaiman be weird enough for him? American Gods and Anansi Boys have quite a bit of quirkiness to them.


message 10: by Kelly (Maybedog) (new)

Kelly (Maybedog) (maybedog) I want to thank you all for these suggestions (and if you come up with more, I'm still taking titles!) I thought you all might like to see the list I've come up with so far from your recommendations and suggestions from elsewhere.

The books in bold I loved. The ones in italic I liked a lot. Infinite Jest is the only one I hated. Thanks to you all I've expanded my own to-read list!

A. Lee Martinez: Anything
Angela Carter: The Infernal Desire Machines Of Doctor Hoffman
Barry Hughart: Bridge Of Birds
Carlton Mellick III: Fishy-Fleshed
Charles Stross: Atrocity Archives
Chris Genoa: Foop
Christopher Moore: Practical Demonkeeping
Connie Willis: To Say Nothing Of The Dog
Connie Willis: Bellweather
Connie Willis: Impossible Things
Daniel Handler: Watch Your Mouth
David Foster Wallace: Infinite Jest
David Gerrold: Man Who Folded Himself
Diana Wynn Jones: Dark Lord Of Derkholm
Ian M. Banks: Whit
Jaspar Ffords: Eyre Affair
Jeremy Shipp: Vacation
Matt Ruff: Sewer, Gas And Electric The Public Works Trilogy
Max Barry: Jennifer Government
Neal Gaiman: Good Omens
Neal Gaiman: American Gods
Neal Gaiman: Anansi Boys
Neal Stephenson: Snow Crash
Nick Walker: Blackbox
Ra Macavoy: Tea With The Black Dragon
Rob Grant: Incompetence
Sean Stewart: Mockingbird
Terry Jones: Starship Titanic
Terry Pratchett: Colour Of Magic
Tom Holt: Anything
Matt Ruff: Bad Monkeys
Patrick O'Leary: Door Number Three

Thank you again!


message 11: by Zen (new)

Zen (zentea) | 135 comments Three come to mind if you are still working on this:


Space-pop:
The Coyote Kings of the Space-Age Bachelor Pad

Dark weird fantasy:
The Scar
Lye Street


message 12: by Joelberg (new)

Joelberg | 5 comments FUN:

Ben Bova: The Sam Gunn Omnibus

Awesome fun read.


message 13: by Mofo (new)

Mofo (Moforious) | 6 comments Have to check out Liberation by Brian Francis Slattery. best book i read all year.


message 14: by Vincent (new)

Vincent Lowry (vlowry) | 9 comments Try this classic if he hasn't aready read it: The Invisible Man by H.G. Wells.

-Vince


message 15: by Jon (new)

Jon (jonmoss) | 889 comments Vincent wrote: "Try this classic if he hasn't aready read it: The Invisible Man by H.G. Wells.

-Vince"


I'm reading this as an ebook on my BlackBerry this month (when I can tear myself away from the Best of Robert E. Howard anthology. :)




message 16: by Vincent (new)

Vincent Lowry (vlowry) | 9 comments I'm sure you'll enjoy it, Jon!

It's fairly short, so you'll probably finish it within a few days.


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