Poll
July 2020 BOTM - New Wave (1960-79) which book would you like to read & discuss?
Poll added by: Jim
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Notes on availability:
Ship who sang: paper, kindle, audio all available.
Treason: paper, kindle, audio.
Lucifer's Hammer: paper, kindle, audio all available.
Pilgramage is only available as a used book. But Ingathering: The Complete People Stories contains the same stories in Kindle format. No audio format available.
They walked like men: paper only.
Let me know if you can find other editions of those last 2, because some people only use one format.
Ship who sang: paper, kindle, audio all available.
Treason: paper, kindle, audio.
Lucifer's Hammer: paper, kindle, audio all available.
Pilgramage is only available as a used book. But Ingathering: The Complete People Stories contains the same stories in Kindle format. No audio format available.
They walked like men: paper only.
Let me know if you can find other editions of those last 2, because some people only use one format.
"They walked like men" sounds fun, and so does "Pilgramage". But partly due to availability I'm voting for "Ship who sang". May change my mind later, of course.




And the winner is .......... Lucifer's Hammer.
I wish this site would automatically close the poll at the right time, but looks like Jim will need to edit it.
I wanted "The Ship Who Sang". But I'll console myself with the fact that locally the Golden Gate Bridge has started singing.
https://twitter.com/markkrueg/status/...
I wish this site would automatically close the poll at the right time, but looks like Jim will need to edit it.
I wanted "The Ship Who Sang". But I'll console myself with the fact that locally the Golden Gate Bridge has started singing.
https://twitter.com/markkrueg/status/...

I wish this site would automatically close the poll at the right time, but looks like Jim will need to edit it..."
No, it will automatically close at midnight PDT.
Dang it. I'm once again confused about what day it is. OK. Lucifer's Hammer might not win, but it looks likely that it will.
I apologize for the malfunctioning of my time machine. But now it seems that it really has won all over again!
While re-calibrating my time machine, I traveled to August 2014, the last time this group read Lucifer's Hammer.
ESCANDALO!
It should have been ineligible since the group has read it before. This shakes my faith in our democracy! I am hiding behind dark glasses and hope no one will recognize me around town.
Back then, there were 4 books for the group to read that month. So Lucifer's Hammer didn't get much activity.
While re-calibrating my time machine, I traveled to August 2014, the last time this group read Lucifer's Hammer.
ESCANDALO!
It should have been ineligible since the group has read it before. This shakes my faith in our democracy! I am hiding behind dark glasses and hope no one will recognize me around town.
Back then, there were 4 books for the group to read that month. So Lucifer's Hammer didn't get much activity.

And we should wish it many future wins as well! :)
So, do we read it in July?

https://www.goodreads.com/topic/show/...
Should we read the runner-up as well?


"What we need is a good analogy. Um . . ." Sharps's brow furrowed.
"Hot fudge sundae," said Forrester.
"Hah?"
Forrester's grin was wide through his beard. "A cubic mile of hot fudge sundae. Cometary speeds."
Sharps's eyes lit up. "I like it! Let's hit Earth with a cubic mile of hot fudge sundae."
Lord God, they've gone bonkers, Harvey thought. The two men raced each other to the blackboard. Sharps began to draw. "Okay. Hot fudge sundae. Let's see: We'll put the vanilla ice cream in the center with a layer of fudge over it . . ."
He ignored the strangled sound behind him. Tim Hamner hadn't said a word during the whole interview. Now he was doubled over, holding himself, trying to hold in the laughter. He looked up, choked, got his face straight, said, "I can't stand it!" and brayed like a jackass. "My comet! A cubic mile of hot . . . fudge . . . sun . . . dae . . ."
"With the fudge as the outer shell," Forrester amplified, "so the fudge will heat up when the Hammer rounds the Sun."
"That's Hamner-Brown," Tim said, straight-faced.
"No, my child, that's a cubic mile of hot fudge sundae. And the ice cream will still be frozen inside the shell," said Sharps.
Harvey said, "But you forgot the—"
"We put the cherry at one pole and say that pole was in shadow at perihelion." Sharps sketched to show that when the comet rounded the Sun, the cherry at the oblate spheroid's axis would be on the side away from Sol. "We don't want it scorched. And we'll put crushed nuts all through it, to represent rocks. Say a two-hundred-foot cherry?"
"Carried by the Royal Canadian Air Force," Mark said.
"Stan Freberg! Right!" Forrester whooped. "Shhhh . . . plop! Let's see you do that on television!"
"And now, as the comet rounds the Sun, trailing a luminous froth of fake whipped cream, and aims itself down our throats . . . Dan, what's the density of vanilla ice cream?"
Forrester shrugged. "It floats. Say two-thirds."
"Right. Point six six six it is." Sharps seized a pocket calculator from the desk and punched frantically. "I love these things. Used to use slide rules. Never could figure out where the decimal point went.
"A cubic mile to play with. Five thousand two hundred and eighty feet, times twelve for inches, times two point five four for centimeters, cube that . . . We have two point seven seven six times ten to the fifteenth cubic centimeters of vanilla ice cream. It would take a while to eat it all. Times the density, and lo, we have about two times ten to the fifteenth grams. Couple of billion tons. Now for the fudge . . ." Sharps punched away.
Happy as a clam, Harvey thought. A very voluble clam equipped with Texas Instruments' latest pocket marvel.
"What do you like for the density of hot fudge?" Sharps asked.
"Call it point nine," Forrester said.
"Haven't any of you made fudge?" Charlene demanded. "It doesn't float. You test it by dripping it into a cup of cold water. Or at least my mother did."
"Say one point two, then," Forrester said.
"Another billion and a half tons of hot fudge," Sharps said.


As the title of the poll says "July 2020".
;)

I'm probably going to vote for Treason, although I read that not too long ago. It was really good in audio format. I've read all of them except Pilgrimage before & liked them very much.