The Kiwifarms Unofficial Sci-Fi/Fantasy Book Club

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VeteranOfTheRetardWars

The Strongest Weakling
kiwifarms.net
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27 de Sep, 2022
BOOK OF THE MONTH: Guards! Guards! by Terry Pratchett
POLL FOR JUNE: Detective Mysteries


The City & the City — China Miéville
Inspector Tyador Borlú investigates a murder that crosses the boundaries of two cities occupying the same physical space. Citizens are trained from birth to “unsee” the other city, and the mystery slowly becomes tangled in politics, perception, and reality itself. Equal parts noir detective story and surreal speculative fiction, it feels like a police procedural taking place inside a philosophical nightmare.

Guards! Guards! — Terry Pratchett
The Night Watch of Ankh-Morpork is drunk, lazy, and gloriously incompetent—until a dragon begins terrorizing the city. Captain Vimes and his ragtag guards stumble into conspiracies, secret societies, and civic corruption while somehow becoming actual detectives along the way. Funny, heartfelt, and sharper than it first appears, this is one of the best entry points into Discworld.

Altered Carbon — Richard K. Morgan
In a future where human consciousness can be transferred between bodies, ex-soldier Takeshi Kovacs is hired to solve the murder of a billionaire whose memories of the crime were erased upon resurrection. Hardboiled cyberpunk drenched in neon, violence, and existential dread, the novel asks what murder even means when death itself becomes negotiable.

The Yiddish Policemen's Union — Michael Chabon
An alcoholic detective investigates the death of a heroin addict in an alternate-history Jewish settlement in Alaska. What begins as a routine case spirals into messianic conspiracies and political intrigue. Chabon blends noir melancholy with rich cultural texture to create a strange, snowy detective story unlike anything else in sci-fi or fantasy.

The Seven Deaths of Evelyn Hardcastle — Stuart Turton
A man wakes up with no memory and discovers he must solve a murder while reliving the same day through the bodies of different guests at a decaying manor house. Every perspective changes the puzzle. A bizarre fusion of Agatha Christie, time loops, and psychological horror that practically demands book club theorizing.

Leviathan Wakes — James S. A. Corey
Part space opera and part detective noir, the story follows washed-up detective Miller as he searches for a missing girl across the asteroid belt. His investigation collides with political tensions, corporate secrets, and cosmic horror. The mystery slowly expands from grimy noir into galaxy-shaping catastrophe.

Dirk Gently's Holistic Detective Agency — Douglas Adams
Dirk Gently believes in the “fundamental interconnectedness of all things,” which somehow leads him into cases involving ghosts, time travel, impossible coincidences, and electric monks. More absurdist comedy than traditional mystery, but the detective structure is surprisingly clever beneath the chaos.

The Last Policeman — Ben H. Winters
An asteroid is months away from destroying Earth, and society is quietly unraveling. Yet Detective Hank Palace stubbornly insists on investigating what appears to be a simple suicide. A melancholy end-of-the-world mystery focused less on the crime itself and more on what justice means when humanity knows it is doomed.

Fatherland — Robert Harris
In an alternate 1960s where Nazi Germany won World War II, a Berlin detective investigating a seemingly ordinary murder uncovers secrets that threaten the entire Reich. Grim, tense, and frighteningly plausible, it combines classic conspiracy thriller structure with chilling alternate history.

The Hollow Chocolate Bunnies of the Apocalypse — Robert Rankin
A teddy bear and a human detective investigate a string of gruesome murders in a city populated by nursery rhyme and fairy tale characters. Imagine a drunken noir parody where beloved children’s icons are getting butchered one by one. Ridiculous, darkly comic, and surprisingly inventive.

WILDCARD: Bimbos of the Death Sun — Sharyn McCrumb
A murder occurs at a deeply cursed sci-fi convention after the release of a controversial fantasy novel, dragging academics, obsessive fans, bitter authors, and convention weirdos into the investigation. It is technically not speculative fiction itself, but it is one of the funniest and most affectionate murder mysteries ever written about sci-fi/fantasy fandom culture. Half detective novel, half loving roast of convention life, complete with impossible egos, fandom wars, and people taking fictional universes far too seriously.

Let’s all pick a science fiction or fantasy book to read each month and post our thoughts. The books will be chosen by a popular voot that concludes the last day of the month.
I know we got some real sci-fi/fantasy buffs here, so I look forward to seeing what you all would like to read. Classics, new books, pulp, any and all suggestions welcome.
 
Última edición:
I've already read the first three, several times, too. Loved Conan as a kid. There's a lot of fucking, though. 10-year-old me used to find that intensely cringe.

If you wanna put Heinlein on the menu, then I'll recommend Moon is a Harsh Mistress. It's about moon colonists fighting Earth for their independence. Probably my favorite of his books, despite the fact that I definitely wouldn't want to live in the society he describes. It's just good sci-fi, though, very well thought through.
The Moon is like 90% male because they are a collection of corpo-managed penal colonies where Earth governments send their dissidents, so they have weird open/loose/polyandrous families, surrogate motherhood and general gigawhoring as the unquestionable norm. They are also being kind of abused by their corporate handlers, and there's enough of them and they've been living there long enough to consider themselves a separate culture and desire independence. Their opponents on Earth, however (at least America), are a puritan Christan society that throws the main character into prison for being in a polycule. Heinlein LOVED depicting Future America as some flavor of hardline Christian, for some reason. It pops up in his shorter stories, as well, if I'm not mixing anything up.
Yes, by the way, it's where Brianna Wu got the idea for "using the Moon's low gravity to chuck rocks at Earth", cause that's what they do in the book, in lieu of artillery.
 
All the options are great, but there's no outright singular "Conan" book, it's mostly short stories and like 1-2 novels iirc. Any of the 3 Del Rey volumes are great.

I'd consider putting in a few other books so that it's not all adventure or Heinlein. Frederick Pohl's Jem, Poul Anderson's Tau Zero, Christopher Priest's The Inverted World, Edgar Pangborn's Mirror for Observers, J. G. Ballard's Chronopolis, and William Gibson's Neuromancer. It'd be a good rounding out.
 
All the options are great, but there's no outright singular "Conan" book, it's mostly short stories and like 1-2 novels iirc. Any of the 3 Del Rey volumes are great.

I'd consider putting in a few other books so that it's not all adventure or Heinlein. Frederick Pohl's Jem, Poul Anderson's Tau Zero, Christopher Priest's The Inverted World, Edgar Pangborn's Mirror for Observers, J. G. Ballard's Chronopolis, and William Gibson's Neuromancer. It'd be a good rounding out.
Sounds good, I was hoping for more suggestions and you definitely delivered. Tbh I was trying to think of things I haven't gotten to yet and those are the ones that came to mind.
I'd say we got a pretty good selection of options now let's gooooo.
 
Última edición:
Anyway, I'll throw my hat in the ring. Gravity's rainbow.

It’s this wild, messy World War II novel that’s part spy story, part dirty joke, and part fever dream. One minute it’s about rockets and secret missions, the next it’s pure absurd comedy or strange paranoia. It’s not an easy read, but it’s one of those books where you feel like anything can happen on the next page.
 
I know we got some real sci-fi/fantasy buffs here, so I look forward to seeing what you all would like to read. Classics, new books, pulp, any and all suggestions welcome.
Please spell Robert Heinlein's name correctly.

I voted for Conan because I haven't actually read that yet, amazingly. But I will never miss an opportunity to sperg about Heinlein so I've ordered a physical copy since it seems to be winning.
 
The Moon is a Harsh Mistress is neat
Recently finished reading it in German... only to find out that it was censored and shortened, and I had to get an edition from 40 years later that was the first unabridged translation
I hate Germany so much
 
Please spell Robert Heinlein's name correctly.

I voted for Conan because I haven't actually read that yet, amazingly. But I will never miss an opportunity to sperg about Heinlein so I've ordered a physical copy since it seems to be winning.
Hey, John Goodman, didn't you read gravity's rainbow once?
 
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