Israel SciFi and Fantasy Book Club discussion

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Book Discussions > What book turned you on to Scifi and/ or fantasy?

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message 1: by Simcha (new)

Simcha Lazarus (sclazarus) | 258 comments Mod
I think it was The Lion the Witch and the Wardrobe that really got me hooked onto fantasy. David Eddings and Lloyd Alexander got me addicted to epic fantasy and Piers Anthony's Xanth series was another favorite of mine as a teen (though when I tried reading one as an adult I found it really boring).

So what books got you turned onto sf/f?


message 2: by Nimrod (last edited Jan 14, 2013 12:52PM) (new)

Nimrod Daniel (nimroddaniel) | 314 comments Mod
Dragonlance, no doubt of that.


message 3: by Nimrod (new)

Nimrod Daniel (nimroddaniel) | 314 comments Mod
I must mention that I remember the very day I started reading Dragonlance as if it was yesterday.


message 4: by Simcha (new)

Simcha Lazarus (sclazarus) | 258 comments Mod
For some reason I've actually never read Dragonlance, though I have a whole bunch of them on my shelf. Would it be worth it for me to pick one up now, or do you appreciate them more when you're just starting out?


message 5: by Nimrod (last edited Mar 04, 2016 07:23AM) (new)

Nimrod Daniel (nimroddaniel) | 314 comments Mod
I guess that starting with DL does make you appreciate them more, but you can enjoy them even now. There're lots of DL books out there, but many of them are not considered as good books. The good books were written by the original authors (weis & hickman) and maybe a few more authors. If you ever start reading this series then you should start with DL Chronicles first.


message 6: by Shir (new)

Shir Sharon | 10 comments the first Harry Potter was the first book I ever read, I was 9 years old and it got me hooked on fantasy for the remainder of elementary school in which I've read three more Harry Potter novels, The Hobbit, the first Lord of the Rings, the three first Narnia novels and the two books of The Neverending Story, after all these I pretty much neglected reading until I was nine-teen (I read around five books throughout these seven years) only to get hooked again by another semi fantasy novel Mr Vertigo, I've been an avid reader ever since


message 7: by Tzippy (new)

Tzippy (trempnvt) | 28 comments I read The Chronicles of Narnia first, but it was A Wrinkle in Time that hooked me.


message 8: by Genia (new)

Genia Lukin | 42 comments Dear God... Uhh, uhhh... Oh, yeah, my parents gave me Monday Begins on Saturday to read one day when I was still small enough to fit under the table (not difficult - I am sort of short) and that was that, I guess.


message 9: by Jon (new)

Jon (jon17) | 64 comments Perhaps it was Winnie the Pooh.


message 10: by Inna (new)

Inna (innas) | 6 comments I am with Genia on this. Strugatsky brothers in general, I would say, though Monday Begins on Saturday is such an unusually optimistic and happy book.


message 11: by Genia (new)

Genia Lukin | 42 comments What can I say? I was nine or ten at the time.


message 12: by Inna (new)

Inna (innas) | 6 comments Hell, I was even younger.


message 13: by Genia (new)

Genia Lukin | 42 comments Actually Bulgakov came earlier for me (I was seven, I think), and I suppose he counts as Fantasy.


message 14: by Inna (new)

Inna (innas) | 6 comments The other way around for me - took me a while longer to get to Bulgakov.


message 15: by Shir (new)

Shir Sharon | 10 comments i just got to Bulkagov recently, read The Master And Margarita obviously, there were a lot of things i did not understand, i guess you need to be russian or to have a very good knowledge of history to truly enjoy this book


message 16: by Yortam (new)

Yortam | 1 comments fantasy. something like the "percy jackson" series are the type of books i like best.


message 17: by Leilla (new)

Leilla (leillaf) | 4 comments Definitely The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe when I was eight (unless it was fairy tales beforehand, which it might have been).


message 18: by Esther (last edited Sep 08, 2015 10:55PM) (new)

Esther (eshchory) | 218 comments Mod
The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe was one of the the first books I read and I loved it. I read the whole Narnia series several times. I also loved books like Tom's Midnight Garden and by Alan Garner and Joan Aitken but in those days children's books were less genre-typed and for me Fantasy=Tolkein so I never thought I was reading fantasy until much later.
Sci/fi was different because I was older - definitely Trillions by Nicholas Fisk. I loved all his books and also John Christopher but first of all came Trillions - I loved that book so much.


message 19: by Janna Lemster (new)

Janna Lemster | 1 comments For me, it was definitely Wheel of Time series by Robert Jordan. I started with Red Sonja books, but i think WoT was the one that actually got me into fantasy. I read it just after we moved to Israel and still getting sentimental remembering the series and the hours of joy i spent reading it :)


message 20: by Esther (new)

Esther (eshchory) | 218 comments Mod
Shir wrote: "i just got to Bulkagov recently, read The Master And Margarita obviously, there were a lot of things i did not understand, i guess you need to be russian or to have a very good knowledge of history..."
I bought that recently after a trip to Moscow. I wonder if there are notes online to help explain any cultural references?


message 21: by Sara (new)

Sara Laya | 2 comments Reading I, Robot as a teen definetly got me hooked onto sci-fi and probably Harry Potter for fantasy


message 22: by Nimrod (new)

Nimrod Daniel (nimroddaniel) | 314 comments Mod
We have new members in the group now, so tell us what got you into sci-fi and fantasy.


message 23: by Efrat (new)

Efrat | 35 comments My father gave me a book of short stories from Asimove, and the rest is history.


message 24: by Lorelei (new)

Lorelei | 37 comments I don't remember what my first sci-fi was, I know that I grew up with Ben Bova -The Weathermakers in the house, and the various coloured fairy books. It was just in the air. ;-)


message 25: by Shlomo (new)

Shlomo  Ron | 12 comments My first fantasy book (not counting Sipurey Tsadikim which are essentially fantasy stories) was Harry Potter, but I wouldn't say this is way turned me from mundane to fantasy lover. It was really a mixture of several books, more on the children side I would say like Roald Dahl's and Michael Ende's excellent books, Circle of magic (of James &Debra) and
The Chronicles of Prydain. and Harry Potter of course.
On the sci-fi it is harder to tell, but Jules Verne has a place of honor


message 26: by Esther (new)

Esther (eshchory) | 218 comments Mod
I should imagine that a lot of people here read in English at least part of the time but obviously that is not an option for most Israeli children.
I know that for my children there was basically Harry Potter and the Hunger Games in Hebrew and some of Roald Dahl's books. Is there any children's scifi in Hebrew? Translated or even home-grown?


message 27: by Efrat (new)

Efrat | 35 comments There are a decent amount of sf-f translations. They even transtlated Ancillary Justice, which is a very hard one, to יושרה שניונית.


message 28: by Esther (new)

Esther (eshchory) | 218 comments Mod
I know The Wheel of Time series is translated because I made an attempt to organise it in our local library. It is even longer in Hebrew because every book is split into two!


message 29: by Vadim (new)

Vadim Pulver | 27 comments I took Percy Jackson and Narnia books in the local library for my children, so they are translated


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