| ||
Random quote: "It's a dangerous business going out your front door." - J.R.R. Tolkien - (Added by: Administrator) |
What are you reading in September? Moderators: Admin Jump to page : 1 2 Now viewing page 2 [25 messages per page] | View previous thread :: View next thread |
General Discussion -> SF/F/H Chat | Message format |
dustydigger |
| ||
Elite Veteran Posts: 1031 Location: UK | This is what I have read so far this month; 1. Pauline Ashwell - Unwillingly to School - SF 2 Zora Neale Hurston - Their Eyes were Watching God - general fiction 3 Margery Allingham- Look to the Lady - vintage crime 4 Jaye Wells - Blue Blooded Vamp - urban fantasy 5 Nora Roberts - Born in Ice - romance 6 Roger Zelazny - Nine Princes in Amber - fantasy 7 Roger Zelazny - The Hand of Oberon - fantasy 8 Mary Norton - The Borrowers - junior classic 9 Eloisa James - A kiss at Midnight - historical romance 10 Dodoie Smith - I Capture the Castle - general fiction 11 Stephen Leather - Nightmare - horror 12 Katie fforde - Restoring Grace - women's fiction 13 Keri Arthur - Darkness Unbound - urban fantasy 14 Joan Aiken - The Wolves of Willoughby Chase - junior classic 15 Laura Ingalls Wilder - The Little House in the Big Woods - junior classic Oh dear,all these books and only Ashwell and Zelazny qualify for this site.Anyway,I am already happily sorting out my SF reads for next year,hopefully about one a week.That will help pad out my woefully inadequate shelf! | ||
Scott Laz |
| ||
Uber User Posts: 263 Location: Gunnison, Colorado | <p>Finished Ring Around the Sun by Clifford Simak (review forthcoming), and the November 1952 issue of Galaxy. I've been reading through issues of Galaxy from the beginning of the magazine in late 1950, and this may be the best issue so far. Two stories that are still considered classics: "The Martian Way" by Asimov, which combines a cool hard SF scenario (bringing a giant chunk of ice from Saturn's rings back to Mars to provide water to colonists) with a pretty contemporary-seeming political scenario, in which an Earth politician exaggerates the cost to Earth of the relatively miniscule amount of water being taken off-planet by the Martian colonists, in order to create outraged resentment and drum up votes. The combined plotlines makes for a very satisfying ending. In contrast to Asimov's upbeat novella is Walter M. Miller, Jr.' s "Command Performance," which looks at the dark side of telepathy. Telepathic contact is seen as analogous to rape, in a story that leads up to an actual (potential) attempted rape by a disturbed young telepath who becomes convinced of the need to propogate the new telepathic mutation in humanity, upon discovering that a beautiful socialite shares his mental powers, and that they are in contact telepathically. She is just beginning to face the reality of her powers, and ends up using them to manipulate the man into a situation that ends in his death. If you know for certain that someone is going to assault you, but it hasn't happened yet, do you have the right to stop that person by any means necessary, in order to prevent it? Another standout in this issue is "The Altar at Midnight" by C. M. Kornbluth, which looks at a near-future scenario in which, due to the physical hardships of working in space, the labor force that takes on these tasks is subject to exploitation, and asks the question of to what extent the inventor of an otherwise useful technology is responsible for the hardships imposed on those who do the work needed to maintain it. Also, humorous stories from early in the careers of Robert Sheckley, Reginald Bretnor, and James Gunn. The sexism of the Bretnor story--"Sugar Plum"--is hard to take, but it's well done if that can be overlooked, while the Gunn story--"The Misogynist"--is either one of the most sexist stories ever (women are literally aliens, justifying men's complaints about the "quirks" of the opposite sex) or a brilliant satire on those male attitudes. I think it's the latter, but these stories, and others in earlier issues, indicate that editor H. L. Gold liked to extend his magazine's focus on social and satirical SF (as opposed to hard SF) into stories that take on the "battle of the sexes" in society, and these can be a weak point for the magazine when read now. I ran out of time for the "Outside the Norm" book last month, but am getting started on Saramago's "Blindness," which is fascinating so far. We'll see if he was worthy of that Nobel Prize! Edited by Scott Laz 2012-09-21 3:44 PM | ||
Jump to page : 1 2 Now viewing page 2 [25 messages per page] |
Search this forum Printer friendly version E-mail a link to this thread |
Books
BOOK AWARDS
Hugo Award
Nebula Award
BSFA Award
Mythopoeic Award
Locus SF Award
Locus Fantasy Award
Locus FN Award
Locus YA Award
Locus Horror Award
August Derleth Award
Robert Holdstock Award
Campbell Award
World Fantasy Award
Prometheus Award
Aurora Award
PKD Award
Clarke Award
Stoker Award
Otherwise Award
Aurealis SF Award
Aurealis Fantasy Award
Aurealis Horror Award
Andre Norton Award
Shirley Jackson Award
Red Tentacle Award
Golden Tentacle Award
Legend Award
Morningstar Award
Nommo Award
BOOK LISTS
Classics of SF
SF Mistressworks
Guardian: The Best SF/F
NPR: Top 100 SF/F
Pringle Best 100 SF
Pringle Modern Fantasy
SF: 101 Best 1985-2010
Fantasy 100
ISFDB Top 100
Horror 100
Nightmare Magazine 100
HWA Reading List
Locus Best SF
200 Significant SF Books by Women
David Brin's YA List
Baen Military SF List
Defining SF Books:
50s | 60s | 70s | 80s | 90s
SF by Women Writers
A Crash Course in the History of Black Science Fiction
Authors
Top Authors
All Authors
All Women Authors
Author Videos
AUTHOR AWARDS
Damon Knight Memorial
World Horror Convention
WFA Life Achievement
Cordwainer Smith Rediscovery
AUTHOR LISTS
Starmont Reader's Guide
Publishers
Top Publishers
All Publishers
PUBLISHER LISTS
Ace Doubles Series:
D | F | G | H | M | #
Conversation Pieces
Classic Library of SF
Critical Explorations in SF&F
EP Masterpieces of SF
Fantasy Masterworks
SF Masterworks
Laser Books
Liverpool SF Texts and Studies
Author's Choice Monthly
Pulphouse Short Stories
Winston SF
Resources
Podcasts
BookTubers
Magazines
Conventions
eBooks
Bookstores
SF/F/H Sub-Genres
Websites
Clubs & Groups
WWEnd
BookTrackr™
The Responsible Parties
WWEnd Patrons
Support WWEnd
Advertise on WWEnd
FAQ
Contact Us
My World
Sign Up now and enjoy the enhanced features only available to members.
Blog
2024 British Fantasy Awards Winners
2024 British Fantasy Awards Shortlists Announced
2023 Nommo Awards Winners
2024 World Fantasy Award Finalists
2024 Aurora Award Winner
Forums
Home | © 2024 Tres Barbas, LLC. All rights reserved.
(Delete all cookies set by this site) | |