At What Age Did You Start Reading SF? Effects?

I started reading SFFH novels and short-stories at age 18, which was not very long ago. I know it's a little late compared to bookworms out there, but I used to read comics, particularly manga, a lot, and I play videogames and watch anime since forever so I'm no stranger to storytelling.

The effect it had is that I don't have any emotional attachments to any particular magazines or publishers, something I see a lot with people who have been subscribers to, say, Asimov's, since they were children. That's why I don't really care where to submit (or rather, I submit everywhere as long as it pays pro-rates), and rejections don't sting that much.
 
Looking back, when I was younger it was mostly fantasy in reading and science fiction in tv/film. I can reel off lots of fantasy novels I read as a child, starting with Enid Blyton and ranging through Roald Dahl and Tolkien.

For science fiction, it could have been HHGTTG , after watching the tv series, or it may have been the novels centred around 'V' when I wanted further adventures from that tv show. Then again it may have been War of the Worlds or The Time Machine. As has been discussed on other forums, sci-fi wasn't seen as adult reading material back when I was growing up in the 70's and 80's , so the selection from the school library (or the children's section of the lending library) didn't really include much science fiction material.

From what I remember there wasn't much Asmiov/Clarke/Bradbury material there to read; or if there was it was very underplayed. If you wanted fiction, then it was almost exclusively Earth-bound adventures, war stories or fantasy.

Like I mentioned above, I think I only found sci-fi novels to read through having watched science fiction programmes on tv and in the cinema. Thinking about it now, I did read the Doctor Who 'Target' books, but arguably that was more fantasy, especially in the Earth-bound years of Jon Pertwee. I also read The Eagle comic and the 2000AD annuals.
 
TV is what brought me to science fiction - specifically Gerry Anderson's shows and what cemented it for me was Fireball XL5. I was about 8 or 9 maybe when I also began reading scifi - Damon Knight's short story anthologies borrowed from the library, and of course Robert Heinlein's books for children with my favourite being Time for the Stars. I also read books by Andre Norton but at a young age I found them heavy going. I was given Catseye for Christmas and it was a few years before I actually managed to read it all. LOL A Telzey Amberdon short story had quite an impression too, though it was some years later that I finally tracked down the books.
 
I was 6 years old when 2000AD came out and my mum got me the first issue. Does that count?

I'd consider myself a life long science fiction fan. As for effects? I suppose I've always been an outsider in the group, (something that i find myself actively encouraging as i get older). People have quite often sidled up to me and whisper "actually, i quite like...".
 
Definitely remember reading SF from age 9 or 10, Andre Norton, Damon Knight, Frank Belknap Long, Isaac Asimov, New Writings in SF etc mainly from Edinburgh Central Library and another library in the south of Embra. I feel that I've always read SF... that's why I'm here!
 
Definitely remember reading SF from age 9 or 10, Andre Norton, Damon Knight, Frank Belknap Long, Isaac Asimov, New Writings in SF etc mainly from Edinburgh Central Library and another library in the south of Embra. I feel that I've always read SF... that's why I'm here!
I'm 58 now... got some good stuff for Xmas including Olga Ravn's "The Employees" and from my son a Stanislaw Lem book I'd never heard of. A long way from Damon Knight
 
I got started on the Heinlein juvenile books, though they were already a bit dated when I read them as a young middle schooler in the mid- to late-70s.
 
Fairly sure my first book was Doctor Who and the Loch Ness Monster (Terror of the Zygons) by Terrance Dicks (in Target), so I would have been 6 or 7. After that it would have been other Doctor Who books and children's scifi until, I think...one of Azimov's as a young teenager.
 
Have you encountered information, ideas or attitudes that contradict things you were taught before you were 20?
That's an interesting question. Certainly I have. Especially ideas/attitudes related to human potential and our destiny as a species. Works of science fiction are precious artifacts for these reasons, among others.
 
That's an interesting question. Certainly I have. Especially ideas/attitudes related to human potential and our destiny as a species. Works of science fiction are precious artifacts for these reasons, among others.
I have a theory that science fiction tends to put dents in the skull from the inside but it works better while the skull is still soft.
 
Inherited from a old neighbour some American 'comics' (graphic novels) as a kid. Weird, unsettling stuff. Pity Mum threw them out (along with my much loved 2000AD comics), be interesting to look at them now.
Can't remember the names (Strange worlds or something was one, maybe Weird Tales another) They were really suited to an older person, but one or two still stick in the mind. I was 2000AD obsessed at the time to recognise their value. (Yes, 2000AD was sc1-fi, but light sci-fi)

ETA. Just did a search. Yes, it was Strange Worlds, and Forbidden Worlds. And a few others. Good nick too. Wonder what they'd be worth now? Sigh.
 
Inherited from a old neighbour some American 'comics' (graphic novels) as a kid. Weird, unsettling stuff. Pity Mum threw them out (along with my much loved 2000AD comics), be interesting to look at them now.

Yeah, mothers can be strange. My mother called my sci-fi books "something crazy" and heavily implied that I shouldn't be reading it. But I cannot imagine how I would have gotten through grade school without it. It was SO boring, I just ignored almost everything the nuns said about anything.
 
My first SF novel was when I was 7. Watchers of Space had a sort of fantasy story, but was set in a rotating generation ship. I enjoyed both concepts and did not find them challenging or confusing. I also read a lot of future engineering speculation non-fiction at the time, plus various Star Wars story books (saw that in theater at 5). Somewhere in there I was exposed the the 2001 movie, maybe as early as 4? At 9 I read 20,000 Leagues and Splinter of the Mind's Eye. At some point in there shifted from junior mystery to adult SF, and just pulled anything off the library shelf that looked interesting - Niven, Clarke, Asimov, Pohl, Heinlein, etc.

My father read SF and both my parents were educated and intelligent, so talking about the SF material in books was common at home. My school taught science, so nothing in SF seemed mind expanding as far as actual science goes, but was interesting from the standpoint of what might someday be possible. And was more interesting than the real world, where Apple II and Commodore computer programming was boring and produced uninteresting results.
 
I read a story from 'Astounding' (or 'Amazing') magazine at the age of 6* with the help of my mother, for it was full of difficult words like ' disguise' and 'spacesuit'. The memory is vivid, and I can still remember the picture on the cover. As for reading science fiction on my own, that started at age 7, as soon as I could read well enough to enjoy a whole book. :) Dad took me to join the local library, which had 'Return to Mars' by Capt. W.E. Johns. I later bought it and have it on my bookshelves today. Over the next year or two the library managed to find most of his science fiction books for me. Effects? A lifetime love of (hard) science fiction, and a career as a scientist.

* In the UK school begins when you're 5, and reading starts on day 1.
 

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When I was eleven in the 50's. Always at the library reading the earliest Sc-Fi novels. Can't remember them though. And 'Journey Into Space' on the radio.
Perhaps that's the radio programme I used to listen to... I'm not sure if there were any others in the 1950s / early 60s? It came on as my mother was preparing the children's evening meal, so probably around 5pm. The radio was in the living room and Mum couldn't get me to the kitchen table until this programme had finished. I found it absolutely gripping - as was a TV programme from around 1960 about a spaceship called Galasphere 347.
 

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