Sci-fi Women discussion
What Are You Reading Now?







That's all for me right now! I can't wait to read about what everyone else is reading!

From goodreads: Earth's last known colony, Albion, is fighting an alien enemy. In the first of the Taking Shield series, Shield Captain Bennet is dropped behind the lines to steal priceless intelligence. A dangerous job, and Bennet doesn't need the distractions of changing relationships with his long-term partner, Joss, or with his father -- and with Flynn, the new lover who will turn his world upside-down. He expects to risk his life. He expects the data will alter the course of the war. What he doesn't expect is that it will change his life or that Flynn will be impossible to forget.

As of late I have often found myself reading GBTL romances, though not for the love stories. I find the entire concept of MPreg - or male pregnancy - fascinating. It typically takes place within a near-human species of shapeshifters, the most popular being werewolves, though other shifting species include bears, dragons, or others. Sometimes it takes place in a universe where there is a merely a third sex among humans, though this tends to be the minority concept.
The third sex is externally male, though typically smaller and weaker than "true" males, and those in this bracket are called Omegas. Omegas are the lowest on the pecking order in any society or group, usually even ranked lower than lower ranking females. Their main purpose for existence is to be able to breed mass numbers of offspring in a relatively short amount of time.
No one gives them any respect, and sometimes they have no legal rights at all, kept as sex slaves who are abused and mistreated. I am currently finishing a series called The Stars of the Pack about a bunch of Alphas - the uber-males - who set out to form their own Pack of werewolves along with a mass-breeding Omega who is forced to have sex with all five "superior" men and bear their offspring. His outward genitalia is male, but his inward sexual characteristics are female, including a womb and eggs. He is easily lubricating - unlike most males - and feels compelled to submit to Alphas and Betas.
Omegas may be raped, traded, sold, forced to bear children, and generally seek an Alpha mate who will love and protect them, giving them a home much like an old-fashioned housewife type of person, because without that they are often forced to live in a depraved condition, even sneered at by parents, siblings, and those who were their friends before they "presented" as an Omega.
The contact between the ranks of Alphas, Betas, and Omeags and breeding details are rather interesting. To me, the romances are secondary; I'm not much of a romance reader.
You may all think that this is pretty sick but I find it fascinating. I often wish I had a PhD in Sociology so that I could write an academic article about this type of novel. Unfortunately, all I have is a B.A. in History and a Master of Social Work, not exactly the type of credentials needed for academic publishing.

I have just started a police procedural but I have just finished The Blind Assassin
by Margaret Atwood who wrote
The Handmaid's Tale.
This 1930s book about two sisters, incorporates a fiction tale spun by one of the characters, which satirises the pulp fiction then for sale at newsagents. A fantasy about a tyrannical rulership and a Bronze Age religion, morphs into an invading alien scenario, with women alternately portrayed as helpless and sinister.


Rachel, I read somewhere recently--I have *got* to start jotting this stuff down--that in some Oceania countries (maybe Samoa, Tahiti?) that a "3rd sex" of "feminine" males has been accepted & considered normal by most of their societies for years. (Of course, "masculine" females aren't considered at all, but I guess it's a start away from puritanity-insanity.)




I've just started them. They're all sci-fi but I'm not far along enough to really describe them.

You might enjoy the Mountain Shifters series by L.C. Davis. The first book is His Unclaimed Omega but the second, His Reluctant Omega, begins to delineate the forced breeding program.
I enjoyed the first few novels but as it wore on (especially into the next generation), the sociological issues sort of overwhelmed the romance, so I lost interest a bit, but from your post, I thought you might find it increasingly interesting.
(I'm not sure whether L.C. Davis is a female author, though, but it's very likely given the genre).

You might..."
Thank you for the tip! I'll definitely check that one out!

I'm sorry Lynn, but I just can't continue with Census. Please forgive me, but I have the attention span of a gnat, and this book just is not as exciting as, let's say, Altered Carbon. I read for entertainment these days, having burned out on edifying readings towards the end of earning my Master's degree, and I just can't keep reading something that is slow and plodding. It might be a terrific book in its own way, but I can't make it past page 17, so for me it's a DNF.


Also rereading THE SCIENCE FICTION HALL OF FAME, VOLUME ONE, 1929 - 1964, which I originally read way back in 1971 as it was the textbook for my English requirement class, "Science Fiction." Includes Judith Merril's THAT ONLY A MOTHER.


I've finished AMATKA by Karin Tidbeck. She is one incredible speculative fiction author. Still reading her anthology book


I am still reading: "Altered Carbon", "Future Threat", "Aurora" and "Nothing Human" at the rate of ten pages per book per day. I have added the sci-fi environmental nightmare tales:



I thought about trying to finish

Also going to begin reading a Kurt Vonnegut anthology,


Before I was a civil servant I had a part-time job at a call center calling people who had gone to amusement parks in the past year and interviewing them. This was a tough job because nobody really wants to talk about this; but we were pushed on by a cruel manager who put the names of the three most successful callers on a bulletin board every week and fired the three least successful callers at the same time - this is why they were always hiring. We had beat, used computers and beat, used work phones probably circa 1995.
Oddly enough, I managed to get many people - some who were at work, even - to talk to me about their amusement park experiences, even to work with me on a rating system of 1 - 5! To my great amusement, I was always one of the three most successful callers listed on the bulletin board! (My ability to sell and elicit BS is probably why I was good in dealing with the public for the government.)
But one night I just felt like I would rather plop out my eye with a spoon than go back to that nightmare place. I was sick of hearing people complain about the restrooms (even though this convinced me to never go to an amusement park in the summer), sick of the pressure, and sick of the old, dirty phones and computers. So I quit. (I also quit a job at Burger King that same summer - I will never eat at any of them again! And if you'll take my advice, you wouldn't either - at least get something fried instead of beef burgers.)


I am sure you know this, so I'm saying it really for the benefit of any younger readers.

1. Sleeping giants by Sylvain Neuvel he is a Canadian Author and this needs to be read by audio book. They did an amazing job on this. Every character has a different person reading for them. There is even background noises. It starts out with a young girl falling down a hole and landing in a giant yellow hand. It then jumps ahead to her as an adult and finding the rest of the parts of this giants body that is buried across the world. Best sci-fi series ever listened to!
2. Star Nomad by Lindsay Buroker this is a female author. It is set after a Great War. It’s the chaos that happens when the empire falls. It reminds me of fire fly. If the brown coats won the war. It has cyborgs and star seers and laughs.
3. Starflight by Melissa Landers. This is a fun read. This girl ends up knocking a rich guy out and he has amnesia he doesn’t know who he is and she uses his money to by passage on a space ship. It grows from there. Space pirates are invoked at some point.






You know, I'm beginning to reverse my opinion about older science-fiction. I read The Time Machine, and quite to my surprise I found it amazing! (Though I still think that the film adaptation of 1960 is more likely to occur now that we have nuclear weapons piled up.)

Also reading The Pale Horseman, the 2nd book of The Saxon Stories by Bernard Cornwell.
And also reading the complete tales from the Brothers Grimm.





which is a review book, not SF I am afraid. I just read
Captured & Seduced

which is about horses, but not as you know them. Also about alien abduction, a shapeshifter cat-alien man, adult romance, space travel.









known as the Solizen. The protagonist is a girl who lives underground and tries to ameliorate her miserable life through membership in her brother's vicious gang, which includes dealing drugs and fighting to the death. But then she meets a member of the Solizen who is kind of like a future Robin Hood, and they fall in love. This is YA, of course!

And finally:

Well, I apologize for my really long-winded book update. I hope to hear from everyone about what you're all reading!


which is supposed to be about dragons but is actually about ceramic dragons and witchcraft and icebears, all cosily set in an English Nanny McPhee type story. Odd.

In my opinion, Brunner is overrated. James Blish said that "Stand on Zanzibar" was unreadable because a. none of the characters are likable, and b. the writing "style" (ha!) - which was based on a book titled "U.S.A." - was fundamentally flawed and that any writer should have known that. Its main flaw - just my opinion - was being written in a fake "future" slang that was confusing and sickening to read, and I couldn't see the supposed main issue of overpopulation through the story. After so many pages of "shiggies" and "codders", I wanted to use the book as bonfire kindling. (But it was the library's copy so that was out of the question.)
Nothing else that Brunner wrote could ever hold my attention. I put him on my red list of authors, which includes Heinlein (don't get me started!), William Gibson, and Asimov (except for a very few books, I find his misogyny intolerable). I don't care how famous "Stranger in a Strange Land" is supposed to be, it really did nothing for me. "The Sheep Look Up" is the exception, not the rule.
Clifford D. Simak is also someone whose books should just be left on the shelves to decompose themselves; his female characters suffer because they do "unfeminine things", and he once had the character of a female mathematician castigating herself because she knew more mathematics than was necessary "for keeping the house". Also, he had a female lawyer feel that she might not have the right to defend a MAN because the jury was an electronic logic box. Most female lawyers I know are articulate, logical, and VERY CAPABLE. (Jerk! Simak was a jerk!)

I loved City, though; how can a book about dogs, robots and ants be bad?

I loved City, though; how can a book about dogs..."
I'm not criticizing anyone else's opinions, likes, or dislikes. I should probably start my posts by saying that everything I write is solely my opinion and holds no real judgmental weight.
I do apologize if I offended you.

Star Trek had a female nurse and communication receptionist, when you think about it. These roles could have been played by men but if women were going to be in space, they were slotted into the same kind of roles they occupied at the time in America. At least they were important jobs for the crew.

Well said Clare. Men are products of their time!

That is so true about Star Trek! Not only were the roles that of a communication receptionist and a nurse - typical female occupations - but they exhibited "typical female traits". For example, Nurse Chapel was supposed to be a hopelessly in love with Spock, a man who really could not have cared less for her, and tried to make him soup when he was "sick" (cough). Even when Spock showed total disdain for Nurse Chapel, she kept on pursuing him.
Then in the episode "Mirror, Mirror", Kirk asks Uhura to go to the mirror bridge and run the day's communications for the evil Starfleet Command, and she starts trembling and gets halfway to saying that she's frightened, before Kirk says, "You're the only one who can do it," and that seems to give her strength (?). When she's on the bridge of the evil Enterprise, the men tell her that if they're going to carry out Scotty's alterations on the transporter, they need Uhura to perform a diversion, so her move is to sexually proposition the alternate Sulu.
And this was considered ahead of its time!
The Next Generation did not start out any better. Beverly Crusher was a doctor, which was becoming socially acceptable for women by the late 1980's, Deanna Troy was a therapist and an EMPATH - NOT a telepath, because that would have made her too powerful - and Tasha Yar, the first and, only female tactical officer, was killed off in the middle of the first season.
But Tasha was replaced by the "evil" half-Romulan Commander Sela, who was the daughter of an abducted Tasha Yar from the timeline where she was alive and went back in time to stop the Klingon war.
(At the same time, I would like to qualify this post by saying that I still am and will always be a Trekkie, hopelessly devoted to the original series, the movies of the original series, and Star Trek: Enterprise.)


Is this the book where women are given less and less opportunity to speak? Could you tell us about it? I'm very curious what your thoughts are on this novel.

I liked it a lot. I recently read Naomi Alderman's The Power and liked it a lot too but The Power featured mostly younger gals. Vox featured a middle-aged gal, so it's at least a little closer to my age group.
A good PA SF book called After the Pretty Pox: The Attic by August Ansel had featured an even older gal, a cool one who takes great care of herself & whoops a$$ too. Yay for us old gals sometimes! (Sorry...I'm back, lol...I've managed to strand myself in my old age in a conservative, traditional, bible belt area & the internet is about the only place I can let my hair down...thanks for listening ;-)



I've started to read

I've also begun reading

For the time being I have stopped reading The Seclusion. As an American, it is truly an agonizing read. I lost it when the novel's heroine finds an old van and discovers a cache of physical books, all of which are banned by the Board because they cannot be altered. Then she starts reading the books: Siddhartha, A Tale of Two Cities, War of the Worlds, and others. (I had tears streaming down my cheeks at this point.) When she goes back to her apartment she creates a steamy bubblebath so that her actions cannot be watched by the people who watch everyone in their apartments, and she starts to read Les Miserables, and after reading the first page, she starts silently crying into the book. She's realizing for the first time what has been lost in the turn to this Orwellian state. (G-d I can't even think about this; I'm crying. I cried when I read Fahrenheit 451, too. I couldn't live in a society without freedom or books.) So I'm putting this one on the shelf until I can handle it.


by a pair of Aussie authors I met at Octocon. This is autographed to my nephew and niece for Christmas, so I have to read it first.
Also reading nonfic Feasible Planet - A guide to more sustainable living

and SF Moonshine



Books mentioned in this topic
Astra: The Gaia Chronicles Book 1 (other topics)The Blood of the Hoopoe: The Gaia Chronicles Book 3 (other topics)
A King Undone (other topics)
Court of Lions (other topics)
Independent Study (other topics)
More...
Authors mentioned in this topic
Naomi Foyle (other topics)L.C. Davis (other topics)
Margaret Atwood (other topics)
Josh Lanyon (other topics)
Anna Butler (other topics)
More...
I'm a member of a group composed mostly of male science-fiction readers, and there are several boards organized by time periods which ask the members what they are currently reading. The problem is that I've been harassed simply because I'm a woman and was figuratively shouted down just for explaining the purpose and definition of an article word of the English language to a reader whose first language is French but had begun reading an English-language novel - the title of which he found confusing. (He actually thanked me for the explanation, but others criticized me soundly.) Also, when I've tried to describe the contributions of some truly amazing female authors, these remarks have been completely ignored and left out of ongoing conversations.
Therefore, I wanted to use this group's space for women involved in science-fiction at some level to allow women to describe what they were reading and to discuss it without fear of being attacked.
So what are you reading? Try to include Title, Author, and Year of First Copyright. Please try to stick to Science-Fiction. Aside from that, I have no requests of anyone wishing to flesh this Topic out.