SciFi and Fantasy Book Club discussion
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November Sci Fi Theme Book Nominations

Good call, Greyweather, thanks.
Sorry, Will. You're going to have to wait for the "Fantasy to Movie" theme month for that one.

True, but it was also nominated for the Arthur C. Clarke award that year, which is a Sci-Fi award. The presence of Tesla and the "Frankenstein"-ish use of electricity, along with its steampunk period flourishes, tilts it towards Sci-Fi for my money, since the magicians are standard illusionists rather than magic-users. We should probably have Brooke's input here too, though, since she is our Fantasy Tsar.

True, but it was also nominated for the Arthur C. Clarke award that year"
And the British Science Fiction Association Award.

True, but it was also nominated for the Arthur C. Clarke award that year"
And the British Science Fiction Associa..."
I'm good with that I was just checking. So is Blindness in as a nomination?



The Prestige, by Christopher Priest
Blindness, by Jose Saramago
Timeline, by Michael Crichton
I will keep adding to this post, so make sure you stop by here and see where we're at.

I think Eragon is pretty strictly Fantasy isn't it? If so that would take it out of the running.
Greyweather wrote: "Just out of curiosity, do made for TV movies qualify?"
Yes. That works.
Ashley wrote: "Oh, I suppose that an unfinished Australian version of the film is a bit obscure, sorry about that."
I've never even heard of that. Cool. I would love to get hold of it.

I think Eragon is pretty strictly Fantasy isn't it? If so that would take it out of the running.
Greyweather wrote: "Just ..."
It was a tiny-budget indie film I saw when I visited a friend in Sydney a few years ago. Very interesting.

Do you remember anything about who made it, who was in it, or who distributed it?

Here's a question for all of us, though: would we like the screen version to be somewhat available so that we can watch it too? Since that is part of the theme, it could be a nice addition to our discussions.


That's something I thought about after posting L.O.L., so here is my new offering:
V for Vendetta by Alan Moore.


I read "The Phantom Menace" by Terry Brooks before I ever saw the movie and liked it a lot. When I finally did get around to seeing the movie on video, I turned it off half-way through and sold the video at yard sale for 50 cents.
Star Wars Episode I The Phantom Menace by Terry Brooks

I'm going to have to say no on the movie to book direction. The theme was specifically book to movie, and I'd hate to muddy it with potentially awful movie tie-ins, though by many accounts Brooks' Phantom Menace is supposed to be a good one.

For whomever is interested in seconding a Crichton book, whichever book by any given author is seconded first is the ONE book we use for the vote.
So far we have nominations for:
Jurassic Park & Timeline, both by Michael Crichton.

I missed that when it was on. That was a TV version, right Zen? Nomination is logged. Any seconds?

http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0249840/
&
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0095738/


Damn. I'd forgotten about that one before I made my call on The Phantom Menace. So for consistency I am saying no. Sorry, Susanna. That decision pains me. How about 2010? Did that precede the film?

Survey says: 2010 was published in January 1982, adapted for the screen and released as a film in 1984. I'll nominate 2010 then :) But it is a sequel. Didn't it come up in a recent poll that the general consensus is not to read sequels unless the book club has read the previous book? I might be mistaken.

Solaris by Stanisław Lem
1984 by George Orwell
I Am Legend by Richard Matheson
The Shrinking Man by Richard Matheson
A Clockwork Orange by Anthony Burgess
The Time Traveler's Wife by Audrey Niffenegger
Make Room! Make Room! by Harry Harrison
Crash A Novel by J.G. Ballard
The Midwich Cuckoos by John Wyndham
A Scanner Darkly by Philip K. Dick
Planet of the Apes by Pierre Boulle
The Man Who Fell to Earth by Walter Tevis
If needed I'm sure I can dive into t'internet and get years etc for the movies concerned.

That's a good one Chris, I'll second it.

I am going to make those additions now.
I've been giving 2010 much thought, and I am going to buck the trend and say yes to its nomination for this particular theme because it does predate the film, and because everyone knows 2001 so well that they are not likely to even become remotely lost.

Blindness, by Jose Saramago
Timeline, by Michael Crichton
V For Vendetta, by Alan Moore
Invasion of the Body Snatchers, by Jack Finney
Solaris, by Stanislaw Lem
I Am Legend, by Richard Matheson
The Time Machine, by H.G. Wells



No...you can second more than one Greyweather. It just slipped through the cracks earlier. Good thing you said something, though, or I probably would have missed it.

The one thing about 2001, as opposed to the bulk of the series related books in the past debate, is that the movie version that exists is readily available, it is a fairly good representation of the book (seeing as it came first), and it does carry a rather iconic status. Moreover, anyone in need of catching up really only needs to dedicate a couple of hours as opposed to the length of time it would take to read a "part one."
You speak the truth, Peregrine, that not *everyone* will know it well, but I think there is a strong enough case for its accessibility to allow 2010.
Of course, 2010 is currently only nominated, so unless a second pops up all this might be moot.
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Some of you might have missed this, but a recent poll approved our second place theme for September as our November theme. And the winner is:
Sci-Fi Books that are already movies.
I will make the first nomination (please make sure you follow this format in your nominations):
Jurassic Park, by Michael Crichton.
Nominees require a second to become official, and I will keep updating the list of official nominees as we go. There's lots of great stuff out there, so dive in folks.
Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep, Watchmen, Dune, I Robot, Slaughterhouse-Five and The Road are all disqualified because we've done them in our group.