It's time to start gathering nominations for our new poll. Remember we run no polls that are not populated by YOUR nominations, so if you're the type of person who always wonders where Suchandsuch book is when you see what you're voting on NOW IS YOUR CHANCE TO SHINE!
Remember that we're rerunning some of our most popular polls of the past few years, but this time we're doing it with lots more voters (and we'll be keeping the results on display.) It's all part of our new Sticky Polls--the 2019 roll out for polls here at Writing About Writing.
The Rules
NOTE: There is a new category of nomination. It is NOT a nomination for the poll. It is an UNDERSUNG HERO nomination. Basically it is for books you think are great, tragically overlooked, but maybe not necessarily the besty bestest best. I will be listing these books along with the poll results. However, if you nominate a book for our poll it will not be considered for the undersung hero list and if you shout out something for an undersung hero, it will not be counted as a nomination for the poll. (Someone else can nominate it.) Think about if you want to give a book few seem to know about a shout out or if you're tossing your fave into The Hunger Games.
- As always, I leave the niggling over the definition of genres to your best judgement because I'd rather be inclusive. If you want to nominate a Discworld novel as a fantasy book, I'm not going to argue that it's probably better classed as fantasy but YOU have to convince others if you're going to get seconded and on the poll--nevermind win.
- All books nominated must have publication dates from 1976-2000.
- A series with books that have landed inside and outside of the "Modern" zone may not be nominated as a series, but individual books in the series may.
- You get to mention two (2) books (or series). That's it. Two. You can do ONE nomination for the poll and ONE UNDERSUNG HERO. Or you can do TWO nominations for the poll. Or you can do TWO undersung heroes. But two is the total. If you nominate three or more I will NOT take any nominations beyond the second that you suggest. I'm sorry that I'm a stickler on this, but I compile these polls myself and it's a pain when people drop a megalodon list every decent book they can remember of in the genre and expect me to collate the data. It is up to as to how you how to divy your TWO choices. TWO.
- Did I mention two?
- You may (and absolutely should) second AS MANY nominations of others as you wish. THEY WILL NOT GET ONTO THE POLL WITHOUT SECONDS. You can agree with or cheer on the undersung heroes, but they won't "transform" into nominations unless someone else nominates that same book as "best" (and then they get a second). Also stop back in and see if anyone has put up something you want to see go onto the poll.
- Put your nominations HERE. I will take nominations only as comments and only on this post. (No comments on FB posts will be considered nominations.) If you can't comment for some reason because of Blogger, send me an email (chris.brecheen@gmail.com) stating exactly that and what your nomination is, and I will personally put your comment up. I am not likely to see a comment on social media, so email me.
- You are nominating WRITTEN genre fiction, not their movie portrayals. If you thought Ender's Game was an incredible movie with amazing special effects, but found the writing of the book to be a little flat or if you love The Handmaid's Tale miniseries on Hulu but hate early Atwood novels, nominate something else.
- This is probably well known by vets of this blog by now, but there will be no more endless elimination rounds. I will take somewhere between 8-20 best performing titles and at MOST run a single semifinal round. By "performing" I mean the seconds. So second the titles you want even if they already have one. (Yes, I guess that would make them "thirds," "fourths," etc...) The competition on this poll might be fierce. You may have to get your friends involved. Buy them a pizza. Make it real.
- TWO!
Nomination: Consider Phlebas, by Iain M. Banks (1987).
ReplyDeleteSeconded.
DeleteThird.
DeleteCan we broaden this to the whole Culture series (or at least those written before 2000)? I was gonna nominate The Player of Games.
DeleteSecond
DeleteDoomsday Book (Willis, 1992)
ReplyDelete(Holding onto my second nomination while I think about it.)
Second
Deleteseconded
Delete~Marygrace
Nomination: Timeline (1999), Michael Chichton
ReplyDeleteEdit: Michael Crichton
Deleteseconded -Bells
DeleteNomination: Prodigal Son (2004), Dean Koontz
ReplyDeleteThis comment has been removed by the author.
ReplyDeleteThis comment has been removed by the author.
ReplyDeleteSeconded - the Silo series
DeleteI double checked, the Silo series does not fall in the correct dates. 🙄🙃 oops!!
DeleteNomination: VALIS by Philip K. Dick (1981). I'll have a think about a second one.
ReplyDeleteNomination: Hyperion by Dan Simmons (1989)
ReplyDeleteWhy only the first book rather than the series? IMO it's the least good of the four.
DeleteA Civil Campaign by Lois McMaster Bujold
ReplyDeleteUndersung Hero: The Postman by David Brin
ReplyDeleteSecond Brin's The Postman.
DeleteNomination: The Uplift War by David Brin (1987)
ReplyDeleteNomination: The Parable duology by Octavia Butler (Parable of the Sower - 1993, Parable of the Talents - 1997)
ReplyDeleteSeconded. Also Kindred by the same author
DeleteOctavia Butler's Parable of the Shower/Talents seconded.
Deleteseconded
Delete~Marygrace
Fourthed!
DeleteThe Hitchhiker's guide to the galaxy by Douglas Adams
ReplyDeleteSeconded.
DeleteSeconded... but it's also the only title receiving a nomination that I've read...
DeleteSeconded
Delete~Marygrace
seconded. With multiple exclamation marks.
DeleteSeconded
DeleteUndersung Hero: A Planet Called Treason (1979) aka Treason (1988) by Orson Scott Card.
ReplyDeleteNomination: Earth by David Brin.
ReplyDeleteNomination: A Fire Apon the Deep, by Vernor Vinge
ReplyDeleteSeconded
DeleteSecond
DeleteSecond
DeleteDon't Bite the Sun by Tanith Lee... 1976. It takes a few chapters to really get rolling, but it's SO worth it. I buy it over and over and give it away as opposed to loaning it out and trying to get back.
ReplyDeleteSecond
DeleteThanks, Fiona! This is one of my all time faves, published before I was born, and I don't even remember how I came across it originally (maybe back as a shy adolescent when I spent my summers in the library?) so I don't even know how popular it was when it was new.
DeleteI'm Liz... I guess I need a Blogger account for my name to show up, huh?
Unsung Hero (this is my fav scifi of all time so far)
ReplyDeletePeter Hamilton Night's Dawn Trilogy
1996-1999
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Night%27s_Dawn_Trilogy
This nomination was made by Bells
DeleteThanks for the recommendation.
Deleteseconded
DeleteNomination: Ender's Game, by Orson Scott Card (1985).
ReplyDeleteSeconding
DeleteUndersung Hero: The Dosadi Experiment, by Frank Herbert (1977).
ReplyDeleteI would have seconded this if I could :)
DeleteSeconded
DeleteI'll go with William Gibson's Neuromancer (1984).
ReplyDeleteSecond
Deleteand for my second, Carl Sagan's Contact (1985).
ReplyDeleteThe Hyperion Cantos by Dan Simmons (series)
ReplyDeleteUnsung hero - Dragon’s Egg by Robert L Forward (1980)
ReplyDeleteNominate - The White Dragon by Anne McCaffrey (1978)
Second The White Dragon
DeleteCallahan's original trilogy (1977, 1981, 1987) by Spider Robinson.
ReplyDeleteNightdawn trilogy by Peter F Hamilton (1996, 1997, 1999)
Second
DeletePermutation City by Greg Egan (1994)
ReplyDeleteUnsung hero - The Way series by Greg Bear (1985 - 1999)
Nominatation: Brian Daley's brilliant trilogy "Jinx on a Terran inheritance".
ReplyDeleteNomination: On Basilisk Station by David Webber, 1992.
ReplyDeleteSecond
DeleteNomination: Only Forward by Michael Marshall Smith (1994)
ReplyDeleteThis comment has been removed by the author.
ReplyDeleteThe Harper Hall trilogy by Anne McCaffrey
ReplyDeleteNominate: To Sail Beyond the Sunset by Robert A. Heinlein
ReplyDeleteThe Gaia trilogy, by John Varley..
ReplyDeleteThe Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy series (1979 onwards), Douglas Adams.
ReplyDelete