Tuesday, April 15, 2014

On My Bookshelf: Science Fiction



Previous On My Bookshelf Posts:
Fairy-tale Retellings
Historical Fiction

Science fiction used to be a genre I'd stay away from. (Space? Robots? The FUTURE? Boring!) But in the last few years, I've started to love it.

Here are a few of my favorites!


The Hunger Games Trilogy by Suzanne Collins

  I think I'll skip the synopsis on these - I think everyone knows what they're about! This trilogy has certainly received a lot of hype, and I think they deserve it. They're exciting, action-packed, and brilliantly written.


The Lunar Chronicles by Marissa Meyer

  I don't know where to begin with these. They are futuristic fairy-tale retellings that involve cyborgs, a wide-spread incurable plague, and a dangerous civilization of people on the moon. Yeah, I know. Extremely cool. This series is not yet complete - the last book, Winter, is coming out next year.



Journey to the Centre of the Earth by Jules Verne

  This is about a young man named Axel, who's uncle is an eccentric (pretty much crazy, really) professor. One day, the professor decides to go on an impossible and outrageously dangerous expedition to the center of the earth. And he's dragging his nephew along with him.  
  It's an extremely fascinating and unique book, and a great classic.



The Giver by Lois Lowry
 This book is about a boy named Jonas, who lives in a seemingly perfect society. When he's twelve years old, he's chosen to be trained by the Giver, a man who holds the memories of the past and the only knowledge of the outside world.
 This was the first dysopian novel I ever read. It really shocked me: I had never read about such an corrupt, controlling society before. It really made me think, and even though I read it years ago the story has stayed with me.


Out of the Silent Planet by C. S. Lewis
 Out of the Silent Planet is about an ordinary man named Dr. Ransom who is kidnapped by two evil/crazy scientists and is taken to another planet. Madness ensues.
 This book was weird. But I liked it. It isn't a "fun" book, but it is extremely interesting. Of course the writing is phenomenal - it is C. S. Lewis after all :)



 There are several more science fiction books that I'd love to talk about, but I'll save them for another post. And I'm sure to be reading a lot more sci-fi this year, too.


I'd love to hear what you guys think about this genre. And I'd love to hear what your favorites are!

love,
Hannah

7 comments:

  1. The Lunar Chronicles and The Giver are definitely favorites. I also like Ender's Game and Ender's Shadow.

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    1. I really like Ender's Game, too! I was actually going to include it in here, but someone is borrowing my copy at the moment and I couldn't include it in the photo. Is Ender's Shadow the sequel, or is in the companion series?

      Thanks for commenting!

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    2. It's the exact same story told from Bean's perspective, which is quite interesting and not as repetitive as you'd think. Actually, I almost liked it better than the original.

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  2. I'm mostly just drooling over The Hunger Games (must by me most favourite series ever). But The Lunar Chronicles?! I NEED WINTER. I'm constantly blown away by each book, honestly. She could write them forever and I'd still love each one. ;) I really like Ender's Game, too, like Lydia mentioned. Aaaaand I'm a sucker for stuff like Reboot and These Broken Stars.

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    1. I NEED WINTER TOO. NOW.

      Oh, and These Broken Stars is on my to-read. It sounds awesome.

      Thanks for commenting, Cait!

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  3. I really need to read C.S. Lewis' space trilogy. I've been meaning to do that forever!

    And I love that David Tennant gif. :)

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  4. I've read all the other books except CINDER. I'm going to check it out, sounds amazing!

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