Recommended for Gifted Readers
- Science Fiction
(Originally Presented at
Spring 2004
Beyond IQ
conference for gifted students)
(M) - Mature Readers; long book, may have sex, drinking, or drug
use
Places to start - there's more where this came from!
Anderson, M.T.: FEED - What happens when commercials and SPAM are
transmitted straight into your brain?
Asimov, Isaac: I, ROBOT; THE CAVES OF STEEL - You've made intelligent
robots, but that's just the start of your troubles. What happens when people
lose jobs because robots are cheaper and don't need to sleep? What happens
when the robots start thinking for themselves? (Forget that
recent movie starring Will Smith, which is one of Hollywood's more egregious examples of "dumbing down" a theme until
it means the opposite of what the author intended it to. - Tim, Your Admin)
Bradbury, Ray:
- THE ILLUSTRATED MAN - A collection of stories from a great science fiction
writer, each of which is a living tattoo on a man who meets a traveler on the
road.
- FAHRENHEIT 451 - In this future firemen burn books; they don't put
out fires, and everyone lives by watching TV. One fireman, Montag, wants to
know why some readers sacrifice themselves in the same fires that burn their
books, and tries to find out as he learns to read.
Bujold, Lois McMaster: THE WARRIOR'S APPRENTICE - In a warrior culture
where genetic misfits are killed at birth, Miles Vorkosigan is allowed to
live, because his birth defects were caused by his mother's exposure to gas
before he was born. But now he's shorter and more fragile than any other
person on his planet, which only makes him more determined to succeed
as a warrior. When he finally gets the chance to prove what he can do, he
lands himself in a universe of trouble.
Carmody, Isabelle: OBERNEWTYN - Long after a nuclear war poisoned large
parts of the war, Elspeth is discovered to have mutations and is sent to live
with other outcasts. After hiding her talents for years, she now has to work
with them to sort out what's really going on in her new life, because it's
much bigger than anyone realizes.
Coville, Bruce:
- I LEFT MY SNEAKERS IN DIMENSION X (& others)
- STRANGE WORLDS (anthology)
- MY TEACHER IS AN ALIEN (& others)
- ALIEN VISITORS (anthology)
- UFOs (anthology)
This is science fiction for fun, with aliens, strange space drives, and everyday
kids coming together to figure out what exactly is going on in the universe. The
anthologies introduce readers to many of the best writers out there through
short stories.
Danziger, Paula: THIS PLACE HAS NO ATMOSPHERE - Another funny
one, about a cool teenager whose family moves from Earth, which
is overcrowded to the max, to the Moon.
Dickinson, Peter: EVA
- In a future where society and the
biosphere are falling apart due to overpopulation, a human girl
whose mind has been downloaded into that of a chimp may be the
only hope for the survival of intelligent life.
Doyle, Deborah & MacDonald, James: GROOGLEMAN - It's the colonial past, where
people live in log cabins and make everything they own, and live
in fear of the Groogleman, the faceless creature who takes
children away after plague kills their families. Or is it the
past? Where do the Grooglemen come from? And why do they only
take those who survive disease?
Farmer, Nancy:
- THE EYE, THE EAR AND THE ARM - Not exactly
fantasy or science fiction. It's Africa in the near future, and
a general hires the detective firm of the Eye, the Ear, and the
Arm to find his kidnapped children. While they search for the
kids in places like immense garbage piles that extremely poor
people mine for the most precious substance in the world,
plastic, they are figures from African mythology, and African
gods deal with things at last. The three kids are exposed to how
those who are not wealthy live.
- THE HOUSE OF THE SCORPION - Matt learns he is not a person,
but a thing, a clone of the man he calls "El Patrón," who has
decreed that his memory not be wiped like that of other clones.
When he learns his fate--to be El Patrón's new body when his old
one is too sick, Matt runs away to the drug country that now
exists between Mexico and the United States. The reader has to
think about a number of things, including the right and wrong of
cloning if it is perfected, and the long term results of the
so-called "War on Drugs."
Goodman, Alison: SINGING THE DOGSTAR BLUES - Joss wants to
graduate from the time travelers' academy and journey to the
past, but she's not good at obeying the headmaster's rules. He'd
love to get rid of her, but the first aliens to want to deal
with the human race say they will do so only on two conditions:
that they are allowed to develop time travel technology of their
own, and that the academy pairs one of their kind with a human.
And there's a hitch. The aliens are born as pairs, and stay
together all their lives. By rights when one of a pair dies, the
other should, too, but Mavkel, whose partner is dead, discovers
he can connect with Joss. They form an unlikely alliance against
everyone who wants to see them fail.
Haddix, Marguerite:
- TURNABOUT - Genetic manipulation has
reached a point where some scientists run an experiment on the
very old occupants of a nursing home, one which not only stops
ageing, but reverses it. There's one problem: they didn't build
in a way to stop people from getting younger. How will they
manage, both in getting younger, and in forgetting the years of
their adult lives?
- AMONG THE HIDDEN (& sequels) - In the future, parents are only
allowed two children. What happens if they have a third child?
They have to keep them hidden, at great risks to themselves and
to the children. What is it like to live this way, and what
happens when you discover other third children are out there?
Heinlein, Robert:
- SPACE CADET
- RED PLANET
- HAVE SPACE SUIT, WILL TRAVEL (also available from
Full Cast Audio)
- THE STAR BEAST
- TUNNEL IN THE SKY
Robert Heinlein wrote a number of books for teenagers in the 1940s and
1950s, books in which the heroes meet aliens, deal with overpopulation,
slavery, revolution between planets, and the rights of the "people" who
already live there. The technology is dated--they didn't have computers--and
Heinlein's not so great on girl characters (though PeeWee, the genius
12-year-old in HAVE SPACE SUIT is one of my all-time favorite girl heroes),
but they're great stories; he makes you think, and he shows what the future
might be.
Hoover, H. M.: THE WINDS OF MARS - Annalyn, daughter of the
president of Mars, discovers that things aren't as wonderful as
she's been told as she ventures out among the people and finds
they are living hard lives while her father and his friends get
rich.
Hughes, Monica:
- KEEPER OF THE ISIS LIGHT - In order to survive on a colony world where conditions everywhere aren't ideal for
human life, Olwen, the girl who keeps the beacon going, has been
genetically changed so she can safely live on the surface. When
colonists from Earth arrive at last, she discovers that they
think she is a monster. Who would befriend her? Who can set
aside prejudice to see the person beyond?
- INVITATION TO THE GAME - In 2154 Earth is over-crowded. There
are no jobs. After school kids are placed in areas where they
are fed and looked after, but treated as beggars. Lisse and her
friends discover a new Virtual Reality game that takes them
through different levels, where they must survive on a new world
or die. At each level when they make a mistake so bad it's fatal
they wake up at home--until the last level, when they learn what
the game is really about.
Klause, Annette Curtis ALIEN SECRETS. Kicked out of school,
Puck befriends an alien ex-slave on the ship home, to discover
he has found a priceless artifact of his people, one taken from
him by their former masters, who will stop at nothing to keep
it. Friendship happens between the most unlikely beings in
science fiction, and this is a good one.
Kress, Nancy:
- MAXIMUM LIGHT. In the future, there are fewer
and fewer kids. As people age, they search for meaning in pets
that have been illegally altered to have human characteristics.
(M)
- BEGGARS IN SPAIN. What kind of people result if they have
been genetically altered not to require sleep? What kind of
artists are they, and how can they relate to human beings who do
require sleep? How do the people who must sleep deal with them?
(M)
L'Engle, Madeleine: A WRINKLE IN TIME - Part religious fantasy
(there are angels) and part science fiction. Meg's father
disappeared when he and their mother were working on a new way
to travel through space. Now he's in trouble, and the three very
strange old ladies who live nearby have come to show the very
young, very gifted Charles Wallace, his hostile (to outsiders)
big sister Meg, and their friend Calvin what life is like on
other worlds, and how they can bring Mr. Murry home.
Marsden, John: TOMORROW, WHEN THE WAR BEGAN - Kids away on a
camping trip come back to find their home has been conquered by
an unnamed enemy. What will they do, and where will they go?
What happened to their families? And will they fight back
against the invaders?
Nix, Garth: SHADE'S CHILDREN - Kids struggling to survive in a
world ravaged by alien invaders are taken up by an artificial
intelligence named Shade, who cares for them and makes them his
soldiers in the fight against the aliens. But is Shade helping
the humans, or is he just helping himself?
O'Brien, Robert C. Z IS FOR ZACHARIAH. A survivor of nuclear
war has to adapt, not hide, when other humans enter her life,
including an abusive adult.
Orwell, George: 1984 - One of the first great books about the
future. Obviously we weren't in this shape when 1984 happened,
but what about the future? Will we be watched constantly by the
government, told lies about why we fight wars, and ordered to
obey and not ask questions?
Philbrick, Rodman: THE LAST BOOK IN THE UNIVERSE - Spaz, who's
epileptic, can't zone out on games like everyone else in his
dirty, poor, polluted town. Instead he listens to a crazy man
named Ryter, who introduces him both to books and to the
possibility that the golden people who live far above their home
have cures for the disease that is killing his sister. Can Spaz
bring her to them? Will they help her, or turn them away as
members of the despised poor?
Sleator, William:
- INTERSTELLAR PIG (& sequel)
- HOUSE OF STAIRS SINGULARITY (and many others)
William Sleator writes most of the science fiction on the Intermediate
shelves these days, about every subject from alien invasions to cruel
government experiments on its own citizens. His biggest success was
INTERSTELLAR PIG, about aliens playing a game where the effects are felt on
real worlds in space.
Stevermer, Carol RIVER RATS. In the future water and food are
scarce, and unwanted kids are forced into a poisoned world to
survive somehow. The River Rats escape their orphanage and steal
an old-time steamboat that is now tied up on the poisonous
waters of the Mississippi. Now they must learn to trust and who
not to trust, and find a way to make a living their own way.
Tolan, Stephanie:
- WELCOME TO THE ARK
- THE FLIGHT OF THE RAVEN
Do y'all even need me to tell you about these two books?!
Verne, Jules:
- FROM THE EARTH TO THE MOON
- 20,000 LEAGUES UNDER THE SEA
Wells, H. G.:
- THE TIME MACHINE
- THE WAR OF THE WORLDS
These two writers who created the groundwork for science
fiction back in the Victorian age. What they wrote doesn't bear
much resemblance to science now, but the books are still great,
adventuresome reads.
Willis, Connie: THE DOOMSDAY BOOK - In a future when an epidemic has reduced our population drastically, they have time
travel. One young scholar is sent to Oxford, England, 30 years
before the black death arrived--except that the technician who
sends her there makes a mistake. She comes to Oxford in the year
the Black Death arrived. Worse, because the technician has a new
kind of flu, the labs have been isolated, with no one allowed
in. There is no one to bring her back to safety as people around
her begin to die. (M), but brilliant.
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