SciFi and Fantasy Book Club discussion

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Recommendations and Lost Books > Books by not so famous authors

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message 1: by Hanna (new)

Hanna Imerlin | 1 comments Hi! I read a lot of hyped books and it is almost always a disappointment (I guess because the hopes are so high). Now I want to read books written by not so famous authors. Do you have any tips?


message 2: by DivaDiane (new)

DivaDiane SM | 3688 comments What kind of themes or sub-genres are you looking for, Hanna?


message 3: by Becky (new)

Becky (beckyofthe19and9) | 1895 comments Take these with a grain of salt, because I’m not the one to know whether someone is famous or not (you know, other than the REALLY big names). But here are some which I think are worth checking out and should be more widely read than they currently are. :)

The Lesson (SF)
Friday Black (SF/Fantasy collection)
Flowers for the Sea (Fantasy)
I Who Have Never Known Men (Dystopian)
The Only Good Indians (Horror/fantasy)
A Boy and His Dog at the End of the World (SF/Apocalyptic)
In the House in the Dark of the Woods (historical fantasy/horror)


message 4: by Melanie, the neutral party (new)


message 5: by Yrret (new)

Yrret (yrretel) | 5 comments “The Left Hand of God” series by Paul Hoffman and “The Symphony of Ages” series by Elizabeth Haydon. Both are well written and imaginative stories by two severely underrated authors.


message 6: by CBRetriever (new)

CBRetriever | 6155 comments I enjoyed the Elizabeth Hayden series, the Hoffman not so much


message 8: by Colin (new)

Colin (colinalexander) | 370 comments For something very different, try Sybil Sue Blue by Rosel George Brown. This is classic sf (released in 1966 as Galactic Sybil Sue Blue). Brown probably would have been famous, but she died early of lymphoma. It was re-released by her estate a couple of years ago with the current title.


message 9: by Ian (new)

Ian Slater (yohanan) | 397 comments Thanks for alerting me to the reissue.


message 10: by Sarah (new)

Sarah Connell (sarahconnell) | 315 comments I really like The Red Wolf Conspiracy - there’s a lot to it: cast of characters, magic, pirates, political intrigue. I’m on book 3 and I’m still unravelling all of it.


message 11: by Nilanjana (new)

Nilanjana Haldar Hanna wrote: "Hi! I read a lot of hyped books and it is almost always a disappointment (I guess because the hopes are so high). Now I want to read books written by not so famous authors. Do you have any tips?"

Hanna wrote: "Hi! I read a lot of hyped books and it is almost always a disappointment (I guess because the hopes are so high). Now I want to read books written by not so famous authors. Do you have any tips?"

I will suggest "Feeding Frenzy" by author, Allison Hurd. I thoroughly enjoyed this book, Hanna! : )


message 12: by Jan (new)

Jan (jan130) | 414 comments Have you read the Steerswoman books by Rosemary Kirstein? One of those fantasy/sci-fi crossover type things. Reads like a fantasy but has sci-fi elements. Worth a read if you like that style of book.
The Steerswoman (The Steerswoman, #1) by Rosemary Kirstein


message 13: by Michelle (new)

Michelle (michellehartline) | 3190 comments Anything written by Carol Berg
The Tuyo series by Rachel Neumeier
Laura VanArendonk Baugh's Kin & Kind
The Trysmoon series by Brian K. Fuller


message 14: by Beth (new)

Beth N | 154 comments I really like Guy Gavriel Kay but for some reason I never hear him talked about.

He's such a skilled author with some of the best prose I have ever read.


message 15: by Ann-Marie (new)

Ann-Marie | 40 comments I read The God Eaters by Jesse Hajicek and I remember really enjoying it and I don't ever see anyone mention it. I only heard of it because T.J. Klune mentioned it as one of his favorites. It's been years, may try to do a re-read at some point.


message 16: by N. (new)

N. Glass | 6 comments I'm currently reading and enjoying The Challenger


message 17: by Rick (new)

Rick | 260 comments Urban fantasy and one of the best, tightest epic fantasy trilogies I've read both by Harry Connolly

I'll second the Rosemary Kirstein Steerswoman series rec as well as Tuyo.


message 18: by Ivan Darryl (new)

Ivan Darryl | 39 comments I have just read Chain-Gang All-Stars by Nana Kwame Adjei-Brenyah, his debut. He merges perspectives from different characters, creating this narrative of a depraved American prison system. It might be this year's book for the Black Awareness Month this October.

Highly recommended!


message 19: by Hyrum (new)

Hyrum (sewahatchi) | 6 comments Since this is a Sci-Fi group, I read a hilarious one recently by an independent author. Warning though, sexually explicit content.

The Milfian Conspiracy

As a general rule, I avoid books with "New York Times" bestseller on them.


message 20: by Dj (new)

Dj | 2364 comments Hanna wrote: "Hi! I read a lot of hyped books and it is almost always a disappointment (I guess because the hopes are so high). Now I want to read books written by not so famous authors. Do you have any tips?"

What types of books do you like to read normally, you know like Cyberpunk, Fantasy/Horror. things like that.


message 21: by Nicky (new)

Nicky (nickyxxx) | 60 comments I cannot recommend Chris Wooding enough. He's the author of Retribution Falls and its sequels, and the setting/world is incredibly fleshed-out and the characters hilarious. He really knows his stuff.


message 22: by Michael (new)

Michael Cole | 2 comments Delta-v

Delta V by Daniel Suarez is good old fashion hard sci fi set in the near future, BUT the story is good, you care about the characters, and the pace steadily builds. This is the kind of Sci-Fi where you learn something while being entertained.


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