SciFi and Fantasy Book Club discussion
Recommendations and Lost Books
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Books that are not well known/not talked about often

It’s completely fantasy, but it’s inspired by the War of the Roses. It imagines what might have happened to the Princes in the tower.

The Diabolic by S.J.Kincaid (sci-fi)
Markswoman by Rati Mehotra (fantasy)


These are the 7 I've read and can recommend:
* Rai-Kirah trilogy, starting with Transformation. The cover is hideous, and the first review on the Goodreads page is funny but completely off base, so please try not to let those things put you off.
* The Lighthouse Duet, starting with Flesh and Spirit.
* The Sanctuary Duet, starting with Dust and Light.
Those last two duets are related to each other. They’re set in the same world at around the same time, with the same political backdrop affecting both stories, but they tell different stories and focus on different sets of characters. Lighthouse was published first, but they can be read in any order.

Beasts of Extraordinary Circumstance - Magical realism with some great quirky characters.
Blood Engines - the start of a really great Urban Fantasy series. This author has become one of my absolute favorites
The Last One - A really interesting take on a reality show that happens to coincide with a nationwide pandemic.
Wit'ch Fire - An epic fantasy series that I read years ago that I still think about sometimes. Amazing characters and brutal battle scenes.
When the Moon Was Ours - Magical realism with a transgender main character and gorgeous prose.
I definitely think that these books should get more love than they do.
Happy Reading!

Memory by Linda Nagata: Memory is a top notch effort of creative world design. Original and logically consistent, it successfully merges fantastical ideas with just enough science to make the fantasy-like elements seem rooted in the real world--without any technological geek-outs to bore those disinterested in hard science.
Forgotten Suns by Judith Tarr: Tarr simply writes characters very well, and wisely focuses most of her attention on character dynamics and personal interplay... The various characters are well drawn individuals, and the teenage protagonist is extremely well played: quite the strong character.
vN by Madeline Ashby: This is a smart, action-filled, darkly humorous, hard-hitting, imaginative, no-holds-barred take on the old “robot with human intelligence” trope that stands up well against the better known writers of the (often disturbing) future such as Philip K. Dick, Rudy Rucker, Stephen Baxter, Alastair Reynolds, Iain M. Banks, Ken MacLeod, etc. Not that it’s derivative of them in any way. Ashby has her own distinct voice which is hard-edged, sharp-witted, and wickedly entertaining.
Grey by Jon Armstrong: Think fashionpunk rather than cyberpunk. A Romeo and Juliet story set in a highly commercialized, stylized, corporatized, commoditized dystopia ... tongue firmly in its cheek. Fashion, satire, fashion, violence, and fashion. And did I mention fashion? It's inspired by the author's time spent in Japan where fashion magazines exist for every niche market and appearance/style are fetishized among a certain segment of society. It's glossy, imaginative, odd, and self-consciously melodramatic. I found it fun.

The Bone Key by Sarah Monette. Story collection; horror stories for people who don't like horror stories. Monette merges the ghost story of M. R. James with the pulp horrors of H.P. Lovecraft (not his mythos so much, though), and in one story combines them with an Agatha Christie-like mystery.
In the Forest of Forgetting by Theodora Goss. Story collection. Fairy tale-like, but as filtered (I think) through readings of Ray Bradbury as well as Angela Carter. Really wonderful writing.
RM

On the Edge of Gone by Corinne Duyvis is really fabulous sci-fi about people trying to survive a comet hitting earth.
Hunger Makes the Wolf by Alex Wells is also sci-fi, but more in the "Western in space" part of the genre. With a motorcycle gang.
I would also second the recommendation for When the Moon Was Ours, and I've loved pretty much everything I've read by Anna-Marie McLemore.

The gist of it is that in the far future after the apocalypse there are healers roaming the wastelands, each with a set of genetically engineered snakes whose venom can treat injuries or in extreme cases, offer a painless death.
The main character is one such healer, who recently lost her rarest snake in an accident, and a replacement wont be easy to find.
Its a short and fast paced read, that still finds time to be thoughtful and heartfelt.


My (probablyinaccurate) memory of it goes like this:
It’s about a woman whose mother’s cancer isn’t being treated effectively, so she goes in search of a holistic treatment in medieval texts. After much experimentation, she finds a recipe that not only alleviates the symptoms but actually cures the cancer. I don’t recall exactly what happens after that, but I do recall that the reason this was buried and ignored for hundreds of years is because it was a folk remedy by women. Her rediscovered cure is attacked by corporate interests and the patriarchy, of course.
Whereas at the time it was all about feminism and the ERA (framed as the “battle of the sexes” as we called it back then), it really speaks to the current women’s movement, which sadly is still fighting the same battles 40 years later.
I remember that it was set in an America that had both an economic and environmental collapse which wasn’t apocalyptic but rather a slow-motion destruction of everyone's standard of living... which also feels awfully prescient.
I’m a little afraid to reread it and discover that it is not as progressive as I remember, but I do have a copy around here somewhere.


Enchantment

Benighted, a different take on werewolves where they are the dominant group and people who don't change are a repressed minority charged with keeping the peace especially during full moons.
In Great Waters, the royal houses of Europe all intermix with mermaids (not your cutesy Disney mermaids).





This book is...a combination of high fantasy and alt-history. I haven't read it in at least two decades... but it haunted me for years. I had to track it down and put a copy in my permanent library.
It's a re-telling of the French Revolution, Fantasy style. It's a little grim and bloody. I don't recall any real romance in it, either. It follows a young noble girl as she's brought to nothing due to the Revolution. And I remember the terrifying parts were the parts with the sentient guillotine - and it even has a name!
It's not an easy read, per se: the book is 500+ pages and people compare it to literature like Animal Farm. I can say that I remember this being an amazing, amazing but a little creepy read.


I'm yet to read Spellslinger, but I've read and enjoyed first two books of his four-volume Greatcoats series

Thank you for the link, I haven't seen this series in quite awhile.



This book is...a combination of high fantasy and alt-history."
I read this one late last year--only a couple decades late to the party!--and it's great. It's a fun wall-o'-words fantasy that also has some well-considered things to say about large-scale political change.
on Volsky: she wrote a number of fantasies in the '80s and '90s, changed (or was required by her publisher to change) to a pseudonym Paula Brandon for The Veiled Isles Trilogy and seems to have vanished after that. :(


This book is...a combination of high fantasy and alt-history."
I read this one late last year--..."
I wonder why

The second is a more recent YA sci fi series, the Lunar Chronicles by Marissa Meyer. They’re basically a future retelling of the Grimm fairy tales. One difference is that the characters become connected in the novels. The first is a retelling of Cinderella, called Cinder. The second is called Scarlet, and is based on Little Red Riding Hood, with Cinder’s story continuing. The same process is repeated throughout the rest of the series. It gets a little crowded though, with less time being devoted to the title character with each following story. Cinder has the most important role, series-wise.


Readers with a finger on the YA pulse will definitely have heard of these! More general readers may not.

Readers with a finger on the YA pulse will definitely have heard of these! More general readers ..."
True. First thing I thought was...that series was everywhere, lol.

The Squire's Tales by Gerald Morris are a witty retelling of King Arthur saga (that make a lot more sense that many of the originals!). I enjoy anything Arthurian, but these books will always be my favorites.
Diana Wynne Jones always seems to be ignored by the adult reading community - and she really shouldn't be. All of her books are well done, but Derkholm, The Chrestomanci Series: Entire Collection, and Howl's Moving Castle are especially good.
Patricia C Wrede also tends to be underrated.
The Enchanted Forest Chronicles are somewhat juvenile and better known than some of her other works, but are great fun and very well written. The Lyra Novels seem to be written for an older audience, but are not well known.
Between the Forest and the Hills is a charming, slightly odd and possibly fantastical romp through ancient Britain.

I really liked Lunar Chronicles. Have you read the Wires and Nerve comic off-shoots of them?
Also, I looked into Humanx Chronicles, and then I saw 28 books! o_O *eep*


and its sequel: Rendezvous

I think I found out about them in one of Gardner Dozois’ annual Best Science Fiction anthologies — he mentioned them in the introduction maybe.
Scientists on a spaceship with an AI ship computer, First Contact with aliens, onboard relationships, deception etc.
(Looks like his author record is messed up on Goodreads.)






and its sequel: Rendezvous

Sounds interesting but sadly no re-prints or e-books :(



I really like Sherri S. Teppler but I never hear anyone talking about her. This was the first book I read by her and seriously, her books never end up the way I expected them to go.

there are a lot of authors I like that are not current authors and very mentioned on this site. Kate Elliott is another one, Sara Douglas, Kyle Chan,

Kate Elliott
Sara Douglass
Kyle Chan
for the links, except I'm pretty sure that's not the right Kyle Chan. What's a book by them?

Kate Elliott
Sara Douglass
Kyle Chan
for the links, except I'm pretty sure that's not the right Kyle Chan. What's a bo..."
books by kylie chan:
White Tiger
Scales of Empire

Sherri is such an underrated author. I've only ran across you who've read anything by her. Unless I made someone read her stories. Sighs, seriously her stories are so good.



I'll second all that.

Book 1 is The Summer Tree; 2 is The Wandering Fire; 3 is The Darkest Road.
I also love Michelle West's 6- book series, 'The Sun Sword' ... Amazing epic fantasy world-building & characters/races. High level of detail, intricate plot(s). Great writing!
Book 1- The Broken Crown
2- The Uncrowned King
3- The Shining Court
4- Sea of Sorrows
5- The Riven Shield
6- The Sun Sword
There is also a spin-off series, that are a set of prequels.
Also, Sylvia Izzo Hunter's trilogy, (sometimes called the "Noctis Magicæ" books). Alternate fantasy version of England/France/Europe, a lá late 1700s- early 1800s. Great magic system, wonderful characters, quirky heroes, very detailed (has some comedy-of-manners elements).
Book 1- The Midnight Queen
2- Lady of Magick
3- A Season Of Spells
Sorry for the lack of links!! I'm on my phone app.
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I’m looking for some recs of books that you enjoyed but aren’t talked about too often on social media or youtube. I really enjoy most genres but sci-fi and fantasy or high fantasy are what I read most. I have no problem going out of my comfort zone, always looking to expand my horizons so anything is appreciated.
Thanks so much in advance!