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The Miscellaneous Club > Nov - Dec 2025 - SFF before 2000

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message 1: by Cheryl, Host of Miscellaneous and Newbery Clubs (last edited Oct 21, 2025 09:51AM) (new) - added it

Cheryl (cherylllr) | 8690 comments Mod
Science Fiction & Fantasy from back in the day. I have a stack of them I've been collecting to fill in the gap caused by the fact that my town library was so tiny it had none of these.

Sure, we had fairy tales, Nesbit and Eager etc., but that's not what I'm looking for. We even had Phantom Tollbooth which could possibly count for this month (and is terrific).

I'd love to know what older Speculative Fiction for children that you find!


message 3: by Cheryl, Host of Miscellaneous and Newbery Clubs (new) - added it

Cheryl (cherylllr) | 8690 comments Mod
(Turns out some that I own are actually more recent. I'll read them anyway, but I really would like to focus on older books. Thank you for your understanding.)


message 4: by QNPoohBear (last edited Oct 23, 2025 10:03AM) (new)

QNPoohBear | 9308 comments My personal favorites are 19th century girls as spies or using magical abilities to thwart an enemy. I also read a bunch of books on the "What to read while you're waiting for the next Harry Potter book" lists.

I'm trying to get my nieces to read Tamora Pierce. Wild Magic is my favorite. I love Daine the most because of her affinity with animals. Anything Tammy writes is fantastic though.

Sorcery & Cecelia: or The Enchanted Chocolate Pot was a gateway to 19th century romantic fantasy. This one is Pride and Prejudice with magic. I saw it listed as Jane Austen X Harry Potter and was sold just on that description. I don't like the sequels as much but this one I've read several times.

Crown Duel also Pride and Prejudice medieval fantasy style. I just loved this adventure tale and romance. Some of the battle stuff is a little hard to read but it's not too bad.

Different, for me but VERY interesting, especially now, NOT to be missed is Philip Pullman's His Dark Materials series. I haven't read the Book of the Dust series yet but I know I probably should.

The Enchanted Forest Chronicles: Dealing with Dragons / Searching for Dragons / Calling on Dragons / Talking to Dragons were among the earliest fantasy books I read in my exploration of things to read while waiting for the next Harry Potter. They're fun and silly.

More recently I read the old school classic Chronicles of Prydain by Lloyd Alexander. Also fun and good escapism.

I have 150 books on my YA fantasy shelf!
https://www.goodreads.com/review/list...


message 5: by QNPoohBear (new)

QNPoohBear | 9308 comments I heard a lot about Earthsea Trilogy (The Wizard of Earthsea, Tombs of Atuan, The Farthest Shore but never read them. My oldest niece did and she liked them.

I also heard a lot about The Dragon Riders of Pern (4 book box set) but never read them. I got into fantasy right around the year 2000 and older for me is anything from the 80s and 90s that was a continuing series when I started reading it.


message 6: by Cheryl, Host of Miscellaneous and Newbery Clubs (last edited 5 hours, 25 min ago) (new) - added it

Cheryl (cherylllr) | 8690 comments Mod
Yeah, I couldn't get into Earthsea, or much of anything by LeGuin. And I've never been interested in Pern, though I have enjoyed other stories about dragons.

My favorite dragon story is The Reluctant Dragon. And I love The Book of Dragons.

There's another that I could've sworn was by Tolkien but I can't find it now... Found it! Farmer Giles of Ham. But my review says that I didn't love it.


message 7: by Beverly, former Miscellaneous Club host (last edited 1 hour, 58 min ago) (new)

Beverly (bjbixlerhotmailcom) | 3112 comments Mod
These are some SF that I read many years ago. I read these long before Goodreads was created, so I don't have reviews for any of them except one, nor do I remember much about them now. But I did like all of the Hoover and Heinlein books, otherwise I would not have continued reading that author's output. I read many more books by Heinlein, but I think they would have been considered adult books, not children's books. I put in parenthesis the year I read the book; not the year of publication.

by Robert A. Heinlein
Have Spacesuit Will Travel (1966; I discovered this book in my eighth grade library. It was the first SF book I ever read and my introduction to that genre. So, I became hooked on SF books!
Podkayne of Mars (1970)
For a book written in 1963 (more than 60 years ago now), it seems a bit dated in some respects, but quite forward-looking in others. Podkayne, Clark, her brother, and her Uncle Tom are all interesting characters. Plot-wise, it moves pretty quickly and smoothly. The story is written as Poddy's journal entries. Uncle Tom volunteers to take Poddy and Clark on a trip to Earth (their first ever, as they grew up in Marsopolis), but along the way, political rivalries and intrigue almost do the trio in.

by H. M. Hoover
Children of Morrow (1995)
Only Child (2015)
Orvis (1987)
The Delikon (1995)
Away Is a Strange Place to Be (1990)
The Lost Star (2002)


message 8: by Beverly, former Miscellaneous Club host (last edited 10 minutes ago) (new)

Beverly (bjbixlerhotmailcom) | 3112 comments Mod
These are some more SF books that were published before 2000 that I read years ago, with the year I read them in parenthesis. I particularly liked William Sleator's SF novels; I found them unique and page-turners.

The Monster Garden (1989)
Star Hatchling (1997)
Collidescope (1990)
This Place Has No Atmosphere (1986)
The Secret Life of Dilly McBean (1986)
Dogsbody (1988)
Alien Secrets (1994)
Star Ka'at (1985)
Alan Mendelsohn, the Boy from Mars (1980)
Storm at the Edge of Time (1995)
Stinker from Space (1994)
I remember that this was a very amusing story--the idea of an alien having to inhabit the body of a skunk to stay alive was quite funny.
Stinker's Return (1994)
Under Alien Stars (1995)
Singularity (1985)
This is a great story and a very unique addition to the SF genre.
The Boy Who Reversed Himself (1986)
The Green Futures of Tycho (1992)
The Duplicate (1988)


message 9: by Manybooks, Fiction Club host (new)

Manybooks | 13953 comments Mod
I read This Place Has No Atmosphere a couple of years ago and kind of think that the story is not so much SF but more a typical teenaged angst and immigration type of tale (set on the moon) with a thin SF veneer.


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