melannen: Commander Valentine of Alpha Squad Seven, a red-haired female Nick Fury in space, smoking contemplatively (Default)
melannen ([personal profile] melannen) wrote2018-02-20 07:32 pm
Entry tags:

FMK #37: New-To-Me Authors

So I read the one you voted on last week, and I'm almost finished another one! And I even did the canon review for the exchange fic that y'all decided to make me be responsible about (and even wrote the fic already, whooo.) At this rate, I may make up the backlog before we're finished with voting.

This week: I Have Never Read Anything By This Person, Not Even A Social Media Post

How FMK works, short version: I am trying to clear out my unreads. So there is a poll, in which you get to pick F, M, or K. F means I should spend a night of wild passion with the book ASAP, and then decide whether to keep it or not. M means I should continue to commit to a long-term relationship of sharing my bedroom with it. K means it should go away immediately. Anyone can vote, you don't have to actually know anything about the books.

I pick a winner on Friday night (although won't actually close the poll, people can still vote,) and report results/post the new poll on the following Tuesday, and write a response to the F winner sometime in the next week.

Link to long version of explanation (on first poll)


Poll #19532 FMK #37: New-to-me Authors
Open to: Registered Users, detailed results viewable to: All, participants: 25


Across the Sea of Suns by Gregory Benford (1984)

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F
5 (41.7%)

M
0 (0.0%)

K
7 (58.3%)

Pilgrimage to Earth by Robert Sheckley (1978)

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F
6 (60.0%)

M
0 (0.0%)

K
4 (40.0%)

Earth Ship & Star Song by Ethan Shedley (1979)

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F
3 (33.3%)

M
0 (0.0%)

K
6 (66.7%)

Sight of Proteus by Charles Sheffield (1978)

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F
3 (37.5%)

M
0 (0.0%)

K
5 (62.5%)

All the Traps of Earth by Clifford D. Simak (1979)

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F
7 (46.7%)

M
3 (20.0%)

K
5 (33.3%)

The Third Ear by Curt Siodmak (1971)

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F
5 (41.7%)

M
0 (0.0%)

K
7 (58.3%)

A World Between by Norman Spinrad (1986)

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F
7 (58.3%)

M
0 (0.0%)

K
5 (41.7%)

Castaways of Tanagar by Brian M. Stableford (1981)

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F
3 (27.3%)

M
0 (0.0%)

K
8 (72.7%)

A King of Infinite Space by Allen M. Steele (1997)

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F
4 (36.4%)

M
0 (0.0%)

K
7 (63.6%)

Necessary Ill by Deb Taber (2013)

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F
5 (62.5%)

M
2 (25.0%)

K
1 (12.5%)

The Seedbearers by Peter Valentine Timlett (1974)

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F
2 (28.6%)

M
0 (0.0%)

K
5 (71.4%)

The Starry Rift by James Tiptree (1986)

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F
14 (63.6%)

M
8 (36.4%)

K
0 (0.0%)

Mammoth by John Varley (2006)

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F
10 (83.3%)

M
0 (0.0%)

K
2 (16.7%)

Station Gehenna by Andrew Weiner (1987)

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F
2 (22.2%)

M
0 (0.0%)

K
7 (77.8%)

Beyond the Gates by Catherine Wells (1999)

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F
7 (77.8%)

M
1 (11.1%)

K
1 (11.1%)

Empire of Bones by Liz Williams (2002)

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F
10 (71.4%)

M
3 (21.4%)

K
1 (7.1%)

The Pandora Effect by Jack Williamson (1969)

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F
7 (53.8%)

M
0 (0.0%)

K
6 (46.2%)

The Flaxen Femme Fatale by John Zakour (2008)

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F
3 (27.3%)

M
0 (0.0%)

K
8 (72.7%)


sholio: sun on winter trees (Default)

[personal profile] sholio 2018-02-21 09:41 am (UTC)(link)
haha, I'm starting to think it's probably just as well that I've forgotten as much of it as I have. At this point it's all a vague mishmash of weird quasi-religious stuff, main characters mutating into other things and/or getting reincarnated as different people, bizarre alien ecosystems I don't remember the details of (in which weird sex featured prominently), and the protagonist essentially being the Satan to the planet-goddess's insane deity and being hunted all over a hollow world in which every living creature was potentially spying on her.
rachelmanija: (Default)

[personal profile] rachelmanija 2018-02-21 02:33 pm (UTC)(link)
That's about how I recall it too. Written down like that it sounds like Jack C. Chalker. Only Varley's less trashy and more trippy.

...I just bought the trilogy on Kindle. What have I done.
sholio: sun on winter trees (Default)

[personal profile] sholio 2018-02-21 08:56 pm (UTC)(link)
He was definitely a member of the "hallucinogens and sex were major inspirational forces on this novel" school of 1970s SF.

You must report back! :D

Go mammoths, go mammoths ...