Home Literature Stories Movies Games Comics Blogs News Discussion Forum Art Gallery
  Science Fiction and Fantasy News
T. C. McCarthy wins Compton Crook Award (05-24)
New Gemmell Book Announced (04-16)
David Gemmell Award 2012 Short List (04-08)
EDGE LIT Event, Derby (UK) (03-15)

Official sffworld Reviews
The King's Blood by Daniel Abraham (05-23 - Book)
BLACKOUT by Mira Grant (05-22 - Book)
Invincible by Jack Campbell (05-15 - Book)
The Science of Avatar by Stephen Baxter (05-14 - Book)


Site Index

    Bookmark and Share


View Full Version :

SFFWorld's Favorite Book from 2006 is.....


Pages : [1] 2

Rob B
March 24th, 2007, 09:20 PM
The ballots have been cast and the votes have been counted (I know I took longer than expected, sorry. Life kind of intruded) and YOU the members helped to decide what our favorite books from 2006 were. A total of 44 ballots* were cast and the results are as follows:

The Lies of Locke Lamora in First Place as the book we enjoyed the most.

Second place goes to R. Scott Bakker's The Thousandfold Thought.

The Bonehunters by Steven Erikson showed impressively at number 3

Forest Mage by Robin Hobb landed the #4 spot
The Blade Itself by Joe Abercrombie finished off the top 5 at #5

So, our top 10 looks like this:

The Lies of Locke Lamora by Scott Lynch
The Thousandfold Thought by R. Scott Bakker
The Bonehunters by Steven Erikson
Forest Mage by Robin Hobb
The Blade Itself by Joe Abercrombie
His Majesty's Dragon/Temeraire by Naomi Novik
TIE!Shriek: An Afterword by Jeff VanderMeer and Vellum by Hal Duncan
The Blood Knight by Greg Keyes
TIE!Kushiel's Scion by Jacqueline Carey The Road by Cormac McCarthy
Blindsight by Peter Watts


Some interesting notes:
Of the 44 ballots submitted, The Lies of Locke Lamora appeared on 22 (half!). Of those 22 ballots, it was the #1 (out of five) on 0 ballots. For The Thousandfold Thought , those numbers are 15 and 4, respectively.

4 of the books are debut novels.
As is often the case, the top books were fantasy.
Naomi Novik missed the top five by one point.

There has been a great deal of consistency over the years.

The Charnel Prince by Greg Keyes was #7 in 2004. If this polling had taken place for the 2003 books, I don't doubt The Briar King would have made the list.

Bakker was #1 in 2005, both #6 and #10 in 2004 (The Warrior-Prophet and The Darkness that Comes Before++).

Stephen Erikson and Robin Hobb always have strong showings.
In 2005, Erikson ranked #10 with Memories of Ice, #10 in 1004 with Midnight Tides, #5 in 2002 with Memories of Ice and #2 in 2001 with Deadhouse Gates.

Robin Hobb was #5 last year with Shaman's Crossing, #1 in 2004 with Fool's Fate, #1 & #4 with Golden Fool and Fool's Errand++ and #4 in 2001 with Fool's Errand

The check out the past results follow the link-a-dinks below:
2005 (http://www.sffworld.com/forums/showthread.php?t=13256)
2004 (http://www.sffworld.com/forums/showthread.php?t=9643)
2002 (http://www.sffworld.com/forums/showthread.php?t=4806)
2001 (http://www.sffworld.com/forums/showthread.php?t=2082)

*ballots being defined as response to the voting thread (http://www.sffworld.com/forums/showthread.php?t=15641)

++ in past years, some authors have had books appear in different years and different books appear in the same year because of the timing of books being published in the UK vs the US or because people base their vote upon reading the mass market paperback, foten released a year after the hardcover

Participation has grown quite a bit over the past few years on the voting threads, and as such, we've been a bit more strict about what we allow. Also, as the participation has grown, so have we amended the voting rules alloting more points for the top book and expanding from 3 to 5 books in the voting thread.

For whatever reason, this wasn't done in 2003.

ChrisW
March 25th, 2007, 01:23 AM
no surprises there.

Sponsor ads
Mithfânion
March 25th, 2007, 11:52 AM
By my count it was really close between "TTT" and "Lies".

Very little new SF in the list again. Partly because there are more Fantasy--nly readers, partly because the genre simply isn't bringing forth as many good new works as the Fantasy genre ( IMO ).

As for Hobb, she's a two time winner of this annual poll with Golden Fool and Fool's Fate but clearly Forest Mage did not gather the same amount of popularity ( though I am still surprised to see her come in 4th).

Werthead
March 25th, 2007, 05:29 PM
A solid result. My thoughts:

The Lies of Locke Lamora was a refreshingly fun novel with a somewhat different slant to the standard epic fantasy template. Red Seas Under Red Skies, by the way, is a superior follow-up and I expect it to rate highly next year.

The Thousandfold Thought is a mostly satisfactory conclusion to The Prince of Nothing. However, those readers who do not know that there will be two sequel series will likely find the ending of the novel infuriatingly ambiguous. The novel is not as accomplished as The Warrior-Prophet, but does tie up the story of the Holy War in a spectacular fashion.

The Bonehunters is the weakest book in The Malazan Book of the Fallen sequence to date, hamstrung by the structural needs of the book in the wider context of the series (to bring the three previously widely-separated primary plot threads into one storyline) to the extent that the book simply doesn't function as well as it should as a story by itself. It's a book that needed to be written for the series to make sense, rather than a story that demanded to be written for its own sake. That said, it was still a solid fantasy novel and sets things up for a huge showdown in Reaper's Gale. The advance buzz on RG, which is far more excited than for TBH, suggests that RG could be a contender for top spot next year.

Forest Mage I haven't read, and probably won't. Robin Hobb simply isn't an author I find very compelling to read. She can write, certainly, but pads her stories out to several times their natural length, robbing them of pace or immediacy.

The Blade Itself is perhaps a surprising entry on this list (not out in the USA yet), but a welcome one. The book doesn't rewrite the rules at all, but instead is simply a solid fantasy tale with colourful characters, a sense of humour and occasional, compelling flashes of something darker and more intriguing beneath. I'm particularly glad it ranked higher than Temeraire which, despite being an enjoyably light and fluffy read, is about as deep as a petri dish.

As for this year, I'd expect the next books in these various series to do well: Red Seas Under Red Skies, Reaper's Gale and Before They Are Hanged. As for original books, I suspect we'll see strong results for The Name of the Wind by Patrick Rothfuss next year. However, for books released in 2007, the best one I have read so far is Black Man (aka Thirteen in the USA) by Richard Morgan. An absolutely stunning novel, which another reviewer has called a "Stranger in a Strange Land for the 21st Century", this deserves to do very well.

At the moment both Overlook and Orbit are confirming that The Great Ordeal by Scott Bakker will be an early 2008 release, so that won't be on the poll this year. A Dance with Dragons by GRRM may still make it, but it's going to be close.

Kailana
March 25th, 2007, 06:18 PM
I have never read the book that came in first place. I think I am going to have to add it to the tbr pile next time I go book shopping. The rest of the books I have either read or I am still back in earlier books and haven't got to the newer ones yet. :)

Kailana
March 25th, 2007, 06:26 PM
I have never read the book that came in first place. I think I am going to have to add it to the tbr pile next time I go book shopping. The rest of the books I have either read or I am still back in earlier books and haven't got to the newer ones yet. :)

Right, I was in the bookstore on Friday looking for two specific books and I picked up another one that looked interesting but I apparently forgot the name because it was the book that came in first. I can predict the future... Anyways, looks like I can read it sooner rather than later.

Beleg
March 25th, 2007, 07:30 PM
My thoughts.

1. TLOLL was a very entertaining novel, but the best of the year? Nah....
2. Haven't read this one: on the reading list, based on previous experience of the author I believe it'll be better than TLOLL.
3. Ditto as above.
4. It might have been readable had Nevarre developed a backbone, as it stands I don't care for maschoistic fiction.
5. For me the most over-rated book of the year.
6. Another one I couldn't get into but that just might be the setting.
7. Haven't read them and don't intend to either.
8. On the reading list: looking forward to it greatly, I think it will be on the same level as Lies...
9. Haven't read The Road, Kushiel's Scion was a very entertaining novel despite its numerous flaws.
10. Extremely hard to get into. Since I didn't really read most of it, I can't say its over-rated but it definitely was very un-interesting.

Edit: The results are a pretty good reflection of the type of readers that frequent the fantasy sub-forum on this board - I refuse to believe there wasn't a better sf book published in the year than Blindsight.

Rob B
March 25th, 2007, 08:24 PM
By my count it was really close between "TTT" and "Lies".

It was very close for most of the voting. The last 10 or so votes really pushed it to LIES.

Mithfânion
March 26th, 2007, 03:23 AM
As for this year, I'd expect the next books in these various series to do well: Red Seas Under Red Skies, Reaper's Gale and Before They Are Hanged. As for original books, I suspect we'll see strong results for The Name of the Wind by Patrick Rothfuss next year. However, for books released in 2007, the best one I have read so far is Black Man (aka Thirteen in the USA) by Richard Morgan. An absolutely stunning novel, which another reviewer has called a "Stranger in a Strange Land for the 21st Century", this deserves to do very well.

Yes, I do expect the names of Lynch, Abercrombie and Rothfuss to do well plus Ruckley's Winterbirth now gets a US release. If the Bilsborough and Marc Ferrari debuts are also good they could well be ranking high here as well. Morgan's book may do well. Robert Wilson's Axis could show up here but both will struggle to contend with the popularity of the Fantasy books. Let's not forget Children of Hurin though, or Ysabel, or Simmons' The Terror. If Forest mage comes fourth now then Renegade Magic may well be up there as well. I don't really expect Shadowplay by Williams to do well. Maybe Gene Wolfe's Pirate Freedom, he has his share of fans. Gemmell's Fall of Kings. Jones' Sword from Red Ice. Reaper's Gale may turn out no.1 though.

BTW about Bakker, I don't think Overlook has confirmed an early 2008 release, they just said it would be published sometime in 2008. It could even be that the UK edition is the first to come out, which would be disappointing.

U-Borat
March 26th, 2007, 04:24 AM
Lies was wayyyy overhyped....It would have barely scraped into Top 5 for me IMO.

Next year, I'm thinking Reaper's Gale, Dance if it comes out,Aspect Emperor, Born Queen, Winterbirth (Should get a lot more recognition that it did, came out in 06 in UK)

 

Latest

T. C. McCarthy wins Compton Crook Award
05-24 - News
The King's Blood by Daniel Abraham
05-23 - Book Review
BLACKOUT by Mira Grant
05-22 - Book Review
Invincible by Jack Campbell
05-15 - Book Review
The Science of Avatar by Stephen Baxter
05-14 - Book Review
Scourge of the Betrayer by Jeff Salyards
05-08 - Book Review
Scourge of the Betrayer by Jeff Salyards
05-08 - Book Review
Scourge of the Betrayer by Jeff Salyards
05-08 - Book Review
Scourge of the Betrayer by Jeff Salyards
05-08 - Book Review
Odd John by Olaf Stapledon
05-06 - Book Review
Jack Campbell Interview Part 1
05-02 - Interview
Jack Campbell Interview Part 1
05-02 - Interview
Jack Campbell Interview Part 1
05-02 - Interview
The Age of Odin by James Lovegrove
05-01 - Book Review
Fire by Kristin Cashore
04-30 - Book Review
Interview with Jeff Salyards
04-24 - Interview
Fuzzy Nation by John Scalzi
04-24 - Book Review
Bloody Red Baron, The by Kim Newman
04-22 - Book Review
Caine's Law by Matthew Woodring Stover
04-17 - Book Review
New Gemmell Book Announced
04-16 - News
Strangeness and Charm by Mike Shevdon
04-16 - Book Review
Company of the Dead by David Kowalski
04-14 - Book Review
Girl Genius Omnibus, Volume One: Agatha Awakens by Phil and Kaja Foglio
04-10 - Book Review
Stark's War by Jack Campbell
04-10 - Book Review
David Gemmell Award 2012 Short List
04-08 - News
Interview with Kim Newman
04-06 - Interview
Titanic SF
04-05 - Article
Range of Ghosts by Elizabeth Bear
04-03 - Book Review
Forged in Fire by J.A. Pitts
04-02 - Book Review
Alchemist of Souls by Anne Lyle
04-01 - Book Review

New Forum Posts




About - Advertising - Contact us - RSS - For Authors & Publishers - Contribute / Submit - Privacy Policy - Community Login
Use of this site indicates your consent to the Terms of Use. The contents of this webpage are copyright © 1997-2011 sffworld.com. All Rights Reserved.