The Sword and Laser discussion
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what was the first scifi/fantasy book that completely blew your mind?

When I graduated high school, one of my favorite teachers, one of my English teachers, gave me a copy of The Sheep Look Up. At the time, it was very hard to find, and he'd had to fix the binding and he added a beautiful bookplate for me. In addition to being a touching gift, the book itself was the first of its kind, the apocalyptic sci fi, that I had read. I was super-impresses/struck by the idea of using real newspaper articles from the time as chapter "headers" and it made the moral more real. It was one of the first times I'd felt that strong an emotion when reading a book.

The Enchanted Forest Chronicles by Patricia C. Wrede, was the first major push into the fantasy genre and the first book that I read in the series was Dealing with Dragons.
For science fiction, my first influence into the genre was Animorphs by Katherine Applegate. It combined my love of animals, aliens and adventure all in one swoop!
I've been reading books since I was 10. Before that it was mythology, mostly. i read a lot of stuff, fantasy is my favorite.
Horror, Sci-fi & Gothic- Frankenstein
Fantasy- Wizard's First Rule (age 13)
Romance- Gone With the Wind (age 15)
Horror- Stephen King's It (age 13)
Historical fiction- War And Peace (age 17)
Alternate History- Time's Tapestry (a few months ago)
Comedy- Life, The Universe & Everything (age 14) blew my mind as a comedy, not as a sci-fi novel. The humor here is pure genius.
Mind-blowing books I don't know where to put:
The Instructions by Adam Levin
His Dark Materials
Horror, Sci-fi & Gothic- Frankenstein
Fantasy- Wizard's First Rule (age 13)
Romance- Gone With the Wind (age 15)
Horror- Stephen King's It (age 13)
Historical fiction- War And Peace (age 17)
Alternate History- Time's Tapestry (a few months ago)
Comedy- Life, The Universe & Everything (age 14) blew my mind as a comedy, not as a sci-fi novel. The humor here is pure genius.
Mind-blowing books I don't know where to put:
The Instructions by Adam Levin
His Dark Materials
Kevan wrote: "SF - Asimov's Caves of Steel
Fantasy - LOTR"
Sticking to the classics, love it. I had picked up this copy of Caves of Steel and The Naked Sun on the recommendation of a friend, it was a couple bucks at a thrift sore but I haven't gotten to read them yet. I'm excited to find out what the big deal is because I just know I'm going to love them.
Fantasy - LOTR"
Sticking to the classics, love it. I had picked up this copy of Caves of Steel and The Naked Sun on the recommendation of a friend, it was a couple bucks at a thrift sore but I haven't gotten to read them yet. I'm excited to find out what the big deal is because I just know I'm going to love them.

Kevan wrote:Reading them now may not feel the same as reading them in the 70s ..."
Not a problem, I am pretty good at putting myself into a proper, self-imagined atmosphere appropriate to such circumstances, haha. I'm pretty good at keeping in mind the conditions and times they were written in and the thought process used to do so. I tend to enjoy a lot of things because of it. :) I'm excited to see what the deal is with these. I read The Complete Robot, which was full of great stories. I was going to read Foundation, but I figured, "nah, go big or go home - I'm doing the whole thing in order".
Not a problem, I am pretty good at putting myself into a proper, self-imagined atmosphere appropriate to such circumstances, haha. I'm pretty good at keeping in mind the conditions and times they were written in and the thought process used to do so. I tend to enjoy a lot of things because of it. :) I'm excited to see what the deal is with these. I read The Complete Robot, which was full of great stories. I was going to read Foundation, but I figured, "nah, go big or go home - I'm doing the whole thing in order".

I was just ready for a change I guess.

But what really got me was Tolkien - Hobbit and LotR, soon after that - Mercedes Lackey's companion series and Pratchett. I might not be much of a SF lover, but Fantasy books keep me going ;)



I've read a few mind-blowing sci-fi books, Startide Rising being one of the first sci-fi books I've read and probably one of my all-time favourites. But I liked sci-fi long before I started reading it. What made me like sci-fi was probably an anime series called Starzinger which I watched when I was five. That series was probably the foundation that everything else was built upon.

"
that is entirely possible, I recognize that it is a legendary piece of work, just never cared that much about it, even the movies bored me a bit

Kdawg91 wrote: "Is it wrong of me that Tolkien never did a thing for me?"
Nah, to each is their own. He certainly revolutionized the genre, but after the last 30 years, he isn't even remotely close to the best anymore. Got guys like Rothfuss, Sanderson. I would even say I like Gormenghast more and that was around the same time. But no, there's nothing wrong with that. He was good, I thank him for what we have now, but there are better things now.
Nah, to each is their own. He certainly revolutionized the genre, but after the last 30 years, he isn't even remotely close to the best anymore. Got guys like Rothfuss, Sanderson. I would even say I like Gormenghast more and that was around the same time. But no, there's nothing wrong with that. He was good, I thank him for what we have now, but there are better things now.

SF - Robinson's Mars Trilogy
This being the *first* sort of mindblowing I received.
They were all subsequently vaporized by Gene Wolfe, who ruined everything for me with his awesome writing.

After that I was hooked completely and forever.
I'd have to say Heinlein's Friday opened my mind though. I was a fantasy snob who ignored scifi completely, but the cover and the blurb made me think it might have some good sexytimes in it (it didn't, since Heinlein is never really explicit - hey, I was maybe 14) but the futuristic setting had none of the clichés that I expected (spaceship battles, weirdo aliens) and really opened my eyes to scifi as a genre about more than spaceships and laser pistols for guys.
I have to say Dune is the only book that's ever really blown my mind though. The sheer complexity of the world, it's history, the political and religious themes, the various unique cultures, the complex characters (I still want to be a Bene Gesserit witch) and families - action, revenge, intrigue, tragedy, love, triumph - I can go on and on about how much I love Dune.


McCaffrey's Dragonsong after we moved to Manhattan when I was 11.
Zelzany's Lord of Light when I was in junior high or high school.
Those books really imprinted on me even though I will [grudgingly] admit now that Space Cadet is not an objectively great book.
I first read LoTR when I was too young to really understand it so I never got the full effect of it.


http://www.tomswift.info/homepage/sel...

For Sci-Fi, it was 5th grade, I was sooo bored with waiting for the rest of the class to get done with their work, so my teacher sent me to the reading section of the classroom and I picked up Heir to the Empire by Timothy Zahn off the shelf and I was hooked.


Ctgt wrote: "Dune and LoTR"
I totally agree. I read both (for the first time) in the same year (1979). Both just blew me away.
Lord of the Rings started my love of fantasy and Dune took sci-fi to another level for me.
I totally agree. I read both (for the first time) in the same year (1979). Both just blew me away.
Lord of the Rings started my love of fantasy and Dune took sci-fi to another level for me.



I recently bought (from eBay) a vintage hardback copy of R is for Rocket and a reprint hardback copy of S is for Space for my bookshelves. It felt like reuniting with a long-lost friend. :-)

Sci-fi: The Foundation original trilogy by Asimov, specially "Second Foundation".


Sci-fi was The Last Legends of Earth


I have such fond and vivid memories of my first read through, and it'll always have a place on my favourites-of-all-time list.

I loved Buck Rogers and then a few years later I read The Maze of Peril which got me playing D & D.
Fantasy also started with tv did anyone see the cartoon version of the Hobbit - anyway I loved the movie so my mom brought me the book.
Dawn wrote: "Actually I started both with movies.
I loved Buck Rogers and then a few years later I read The Maze of Peril which got me playing D & D.
Fantasy also started with tv did anyone see ..."
If we're going to go the visual route, i'd probably say the first thing of sci-fi that blew me away was Fringe. I had watched a good bit of sci-fi, but Fringe really did just blow me away. For fantasy, I still haven't seen anything that really did blow me away. Unless we want to talk video games. Then Final Fantasy wins. That's the thing that got me hooked on reading in general; it made me seek out mythology due to it's heavy influence on the series.
And yes, that Hobbit cartoon movie was pretty great :)
I loved Buck Rogers and then a few years later I read The Maze of Peril which got me playing D & D.
Fantasy also started with tv did anyone see ..."
If we're going to go the visual route, i'd probably say the first thing of sci-fi that blew me away was Fringe. I had watched a good bit of sci-fi, but Fringe really did just blow me away. For fantasy, I still haven't seen anything that really did blow me away. Unless we want to talk video games. Then Final Fantasy wins. That's the thing that got me hooked on reading in general; it made me seek out mythology due to it's heavy influence on the series.
And yes, that Hobbit cartoon movie was pretty great :)
Killian wrote: "Although the first proper fantasy books that I read were the Belgariad series and the Inheritance Cylce (both of which I enjoyed and now look back at with disgust)..."
Yeah, I could not get into Belgariad. The beginning makes me grind my teeth. I'm happy other people like it, though. I liked Eragon but I cannot get through the 2nd novel. So I say I like Eragon, but not Inheritance Cycle.
Yeah, I could not get into Belgariad. The beginning makes me grind my teeth. I'm happy other people like it, though. I liked Eragon but I cannot get through the 2nd novel. So I say I like Eragon, but not Inheritance Cycle.

The Eye of the World at age 12 was the first epic fantasy that I read. I've since read many that are better but still have a soft spot for it.
As a teen, Brave New World really opened my eyes that scifi/fantasy can be more than just spaceships and robots and swords.


Sci Fi - Hyperion by Dan Simmons. Until this book I was strictly fantasy and horror but Hyperion amazed me and got me to start trying other sci fi.

It was all over from there. I think I burned through the first ten or so books in that series in a year. Those, more than the ones that came before, were the books that made me a voracious fantasy fan.
For sci-fi, I really only appreciated sci-fi as a film genre for a long time, and was afraid to read the books because I worried they would bore me with the "science" part.
It took Halo: The Fall of Reach to make me check out Ender's Game, and it took Ender's Game to make me check out Old Man's War, and then Leviathan Wakes, and now I'm game for the broader spectrum of sci-fi... but I still haven't read a lot.
BUT, probably the first "sciency-fiction" book I ever read was Jurassic Park. That was the first time science in fiction interested me.

Having said all that, that series didn't cement a love for fantasy. In fact, it was the only fantasy series I read for a long, long time. The one that did it for me was very recent and was The Name of the Wind - Patrick Rothfuss. That book just blew down walls built up in my brain about what fantasy was or was "supposed" to be. I loved that the story is revolved around this legend and he's telling the true story of this legend, which doesn't always make him out to be as great a legend as he's made out to be. Loved every minute of it and can't wait till the final in the series comes out.
Since then, I've been trying to make up for lost time in the fantasy genre. Seems I all of a sudden can't get enough!

For fantasy, my sister gave me A Spell for Chameleon for Christmas when I was 10 or 11 (that series is good for 5 or 6 books then kind of plays itself out, but it was a good intro into the genre). Also LOTR and Prydain, of course!
Not sure I can point to any SF that grabbed me when I was a kid. I tried to read The Foundation Trilogy when I was too young to grasp it, but I sensed something that I liked in there. I guess I'd have to go with Stalking the Nightmare, which I grabbed almost at random at an airport bookstore when I was a teen. For my money, Harlan Ellison is the king of mindblowing fiction.

Books mentioned in this topic
The Hobbit, or There and Back Again (other topics)The Many-Coloured Land (other topics)
The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe (other topics)
A Journey to the Centre of the Earth (other topics)
Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea (08457) (other topics)
More...
Authors mentioned in this topic
Mary Doria Russell (other topics)Brandon Sanderson (other topics)
Arthur C. Clarke (other topics)
Christopher Paolini (other topics)
Stephen R. Donaldson (other topics)
More...
I started reading when I was very young, and I spent lots of summers in summer reading programs. I remember reading a whole series of Tarzan novels, and for the life of me, I can't remember if they were actual Edgar Rice Burroughs tales or licensed stuff written by someone else. I consumed those and all the Fafhrd and The Gray Mouser books. I was already a huge reader, I decided then and there what genre was for me.