Weeeeee’re Baaaaaack!

After an incredibly lengthy hiatus, I’ve decided to revisit this little project. Though with no physical location and no other participants, it’ll be less a book club log and more a plain old book blog. (If by some miracle I wind up with enough interest from real human beings, maybe I’ll set up a monthly Hangouts session or something, but I won’t hold my breath.)

So! Provided I can find them, I’ll get through the (massive) backlog of old discussion notes, and then move on to new material. 

Here we go.

Backlog: I, Robot

So. I, Robot.

The discussion basically boiled down to this:

– Those of us who had read it before agreed that the second (or third, or nth) time through went a bit differently. For me, that was probably because the last time I read it, I was in high school and had the requisite teenage blindness to subtler themes in literature.

– We liked how Asimov used Susan Calvin to tie the previously separately-published stories together. Also how revolutionary (and futuristic?) it was to have a female protagonist.

– The book often forced us to think about how we think about things. We don’t have robot-logic, and robots don’t have us-logic, so the puzzle-solving stories were intriguing.

– The later-added Zeroth Law of Robotics seems like it should have been less of an afterthought, but I guess the original plan for robots didn’t include them being autonomous.

– There’s actual science in Asimov’s science-fiction, for maybe the first time ever in the genre. (Never mind that some concepts were modified, without much explanation, from one book to the next. Real science had either caught up and proved something wrong, or just moved on.)

– It shows its age a bit: Where was my Robbie when I was growing up in the ‘90s? And great as it would be, I don’t think we’re really on track to achieve interstellar travel by 2029. Fifteen years might be a little overly-optimistic.

TL;DR, it’s a good read (and a good re-read), and a book I will continue to recommend.

Backlog/Update

Hello, all!

Quick update on a couple of things:

1. Since the backlog is quite large, the format for those posts will be pretty condensed. The first of those will be coming…soonish. I hope.

2. We’ve rescheduled the November and December meetings and combined them into one: December 4th. After that we won’t meet til January.

Aaaaannnd, that’s all I’ve got. As always, feel free to comment or e-mail me.

Oops

Quick Update:
Sorry I’m two months behind! Life has been a mind-numbing blur, and I’ve been getting behind on just about everything. I promise I’ll catch up soon. If anyone has anything they’d like me to make sure I mention about I, Robot, Ender’s Game, or Neverwhere, let me know via comments or e-mail.

We’re All New Here

Here’s the thing: I really like science fiction. And I like that other people also like science fiction.

So, here’s a book club: Infinity and Beyond (because I am a sucker for having clever names for things). We physically meet at 6 p.m. on the last Thursday of every month at the Almond Library,and I attempt to post the revelations from said meeting here shortly thereafter for further discussion. The plan is to focus mostly on science fiction (June’s book is I, Robot and July’s is Ender’s Game), but I’m sure bits and pieces of the other flavors of speculative fiction will drift onto the reading list now and then. (Sorry that most of that is also in the “About” page.)

But I’m very new to this. And Infinity and Beyond only just had its first meeting last week, so you’ll have to excuse this post’s incredible lack of content – there isn’t all that much to report. We came up with a short book list, ate some cookies, got to know each other a bit, and agreed that we’d like to see more optimism in our science fiction. (Social commentary is all well and good, but post-apocalyptic dystopia gets tiresome.)

So here’s to new things, good books, and brighter futures.