Who remembers their first exposure to science fiction?
I have always been a voracious reader. When I was a little girl, my local library had a special exception for me. Children under 12 could only check out 5 books at a time. They let me have 15, so I wouldn't have to come in every couple of days (I was lucky, my grandmother worked there!). By the time I was 9 or 10 I had read most all of the books in the "little kids" section and began to look in the adolescent section. There, I found the book that set my main reading interests for life.
Who else could it be but Robert Heinlein?!! "Have Spacesuit Will Travel", to be precise! I was in love. From then on, every time I went to the library, his name was the first one I looked for.
When I was old enough to buy my own books, for many years I never bought anything other than SciFi (or Fantasy, once I came across Andre Norton). I waited with breath held for each new Heinlein book. I've read them all, many times, and cried like an idiot when he died. I wish I could have met him.
Now that I'm all grown up (hey, who says???) I'll read just about anything that looks interesting, except westerns and romance, but SciFi and Fantasy are still my favorites, and the first aisle I head to at the book store. I also have quite a few other favorite authors by now , but I'll never forget that dear Robert was my first love. There will never be another quite like him!
Voracious reader, oui. Inherited, non. To the best of my recollection, Reader's Digest never condensed a SF & F. But that's where it all started. After that, la deluge, but lost in the mists of time was my first alien....darn.
WOW, WELL WITHOUT GIVING TOO MUCH AWAY I WILL HAVE TO SAY IT WAS A FEW T.V. SHOWS AS WELL AS A LITTLE BOOK I WAS GIVEN CALLED "THE ODESSY" by Homer AND WHEN I WAS A VERY YOUNG CHILD THE T.V. SHOWS WERE MORE THEN I COULD ASK FOR, DOES ANYONE REMEMBER .. LAND OF THE GIANTS, THE TIME TUNNLE, THE OUTER LIMITS, VOYAGE TO THE BOTTOM OF THE SEA...
When I was 11 I read Alexander Belaev's book "Tha Amphibian Man". It was my first sci-fic. book I ever read. Great book, but I can't find it in English only in Russian.
Really surprised no one besides me has mentioned Ben Bova's first novel, The Star Conquerors. It was a young person's novel and was only printed once. Bova won't let it be reprinted but I LOVED that book and on rereading it don't understand why he won't let it be reprinted. It really hooked a guy who wasn't ready for Stranger in a Strange Land or Dune yet.
Fred Saberhagen's Empire Of The East is what really got me started, thou a friend in college my freshman year tried to get me to read Terry Brook's The Sword Of Shannara. I just couldn't sit and read it, until my senior year, which was well after a whole list of books. I think I was halfway through The Sword Of Shannara (and loving it) before I realized it was the book my friend had tried to get me to read years before...lol. I have now read well over 500 sci-fi books
Like many others mentioned here - Madeline L'Engle's A Wrinkle in Time was my first taste of "something different". Hey, it was on the scholastic book club, that's probably how we all first saw it. Then Douglas Adams, hmm, possibly introduced to me by a visiting girl scout house guest? I started "working" (paid in books) in a used bookstore when I was about 14 which had a nice cache of old Galaxy/Amazing/Sci-fi&Fantasy/Analog, etc and got me really started. I remember reading Piers Anthony - not his fantasy stuff, but his earlier stuff that was closer to scifi - Ox, Orn, then to the Blue Adept series pretty early. I was drawn to Spider Robinson and Harlan Ellison, and to Heinlein, Asimov, Niven, Harrison, so many more....
I think my first exposure to what loosely qualified as SF was a book on the book shelf in my 2nd or 3rd grade classroom. I think it was call "The Hidden Door" or "The Secret Door". It was about a kid who couldn't remember where he was from, but as the story progressed his memory came back, and it turned out his people had been visiting earth from a distant planet or another dimension, and the outlet was in a cave. He remembered it as a door. Something happened and he was trapped here with amnesia. Of course, he made it home in the end. I think he may have had psychic powers, too. It's a little fuzzy, it's been over 30 years.