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| 8-19-06
| "Hack"
Posted on 08/19/2006 7:09:57 PM PDT by Hacksaw
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To: OregonRancher
"You have to be older than dirt to remember "SLAN", a classic for it's time."
Guilty as charged. Good story, too.
241
posted on
08/20/2006 8:19:16 PM PDT
by
Old Student
(We have a name for the people who think indiscriminate killing is fine. They're called "The Bad Guys)
To: freedumb2003
""AC Clarke - very entertaining. Safe bets."
By that I assume you mean overblown hack."
You'd be wrong. You also owe much of the real world to Mr. Clarke. He was a communications engineer, and is the person who first suggested geosynchronous communications satellites. Once upon a time, they called it the Clarke Belt. Perhaps his best story, IMHO, is "Childhood's End."
242
posted on
08/20/2006 8:23:41 PM PDT
by
Old Student
(We have a name for the people who think indiscriminate killing is fine. They're called "The Bad Guys)
To: Darkwolf377
"I just read Ensign Flandry and really enjoyed it. I have three others in the series but have been told there are even more."
IMHO, Fire Time is Anderson's best, but it's a stand-alone. So is Tau Zero, and also Star Fox, but they're his #2 and #3, to me.
243
posted on
08/20/2006 8:31:02 PM PDT
by
Old Student
(We have a name for the people who think indiscriminate killing is fine. They're called "The Bad Guys)
To: Paradox
Conservative SF writers I know of:
Poul Anderson (RIP)
Jerry Pournelle
Larry Niven
RAH was more of a Liberterian
All the rest seem to run lib
To: cgbg
"imho the best military sf ever written was S.M. Stirling's "The Domination"."
Nah. Scariest, I'll buy. It's good, too, but not by far the "best". Fascinating, yes... The first few times I read them (Marching Through Georgia, ???, and The Stone Dogs) I was both repelled and fascinated. I could all too easily imagine myself as one of the Draka, or as one of the rebellious slaves, or as an Alliance agent...
245
posted on
08/20/2006 8:41:31 PM PDT
by
Old Student
(We have a name for the people who think indiscriminate killing is fine. They're called "The Bad Guys)
To: Swordmaker
"Does anyone else who has read Heinlein find such a theme running through his work???"
Not freaking likely. Normal, boring people might starve, but the smart ones will find some way out of it, or any other problem they might encounter. THAT is the sort of story Heinlein wrote, until his brain went away on him...
And even then, his stuff was well written, just no longer to my taste.
246
posted on
08/20/2006 8:50:12 PM PDT
by
Old Student
(We have a name for the people who think indiscriminate killing is fine. They're called "The Bad Guys)
To: BlazingArizona
"One premise of "The Moon Is A Harsh Mistress" was that China and India remain in a state of perpetual near-starvation, requiring lunar slaves to keep them supplied with protein."
Nope. That the Lunar Authority, which controls the Lunar Colony, uses Lunar rice and wheat to "play politics with hunger" and keep themselves in power.
247
posted on
08/20/2006 8:57:00 PM PDT
by
Old Student
(We have a name for the people who think indiscriminate killing is fine. They're called "The Bad Guys)
To: freedumb2003
HIs son didn't start the prequels until over a decade after Herbert's death. This fall, the final book Frank Herbert outlined, which comes after Chapterhouse, is coming out in TWO books--they sure are milking it.
To: FierceDraka
249
posted on
08/20/2006 9:56:03 PM PDT
by
Swordmaker
(Remember, the proper pronunciation of IE is "AAAAIIIIIEEEEEEE!")
To: OregonRancher
You have to be older than dirt to remember "SLAN", a classic for it's time. It's good but not as good as "The World of Null A" and "The Weapon Shops of Isher".
250
posted on
08/20/2006 10:05:54 PM PDT
by
Swordmaker
(Remember, the proper pronunciation of IE is "AAAAIIIIIEEEEEEE!")
To: FierceDraka
I share your frustration with the Scifi channel and also enjoyed that "Think Like A Dinosaur" Outer Limits episode.
The New Outer Limits made another episode based on George RR Martin's "Sand Kings" that was one of the most frightening hours ever to be seen on television imho.
Every short story on my list should be made into an hour long show--they would all be heads and shoulders above both the scifi and other drek that waste air time on that channel.
I also would love to see my short story made into an The Outer Limits episode (would an opening shot of a factory in the West Texas plains cranking out giant Martin Luther King statues be freaky or what?--well, everybody needs a dream. :-) )
251
posted on
08/21/2006 1:47:32 AM PDT
by
cgbg
(MSM aid and comfort to the enemy costs American lives.)
To: nuke rocketeer
Orson Scott Card is pretty conservative, even though I believe he is a Democrat. Dan Simmons is relatively conservative as well, at least in regards to the WOT and Global Warming.
252
posted on
08/21/2006 4:55:22 AM PDT
by
Paradox
(The "smarter" the individual, the greater his power of self-deception.)
To: 5Madman2
Just read the thread-see you listed Donaldsen-Have you read the first book of his latest Covenant Series?
Yes I have. It was pretty good. It seems like it will be an interesting series. Definitely worth a read if you like the previous books.
253
posted on
08/21/2006 5:14:40 AM PDT
by
upier
("Usted no es agradable en América" "Ahora deporte Illegals")
To: nuke rocketeer
Conservative SF writers I know of:
Poul Anderson (RIP)
Jerry Pournelle
Larry Niven
Add Terry Goodkind.
254
posted on
08/21/2006 5:30:00 AM PDT
by
upier
("Usted no es agradable en América" "Ahora deporte Illegals")
To: Hacksaw
I'm not a big sci-fi guy, but I'm reading a novel now that is excellent; "Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep" by Phil Dick.
I highly recommend it.
255
posted on
08/21/2006 5:53:49 AM PDT
by
Pietro
To: FierceDraka
Thanks for suggesting Brin and Bear. I will check them out--I think I have couple of Brin books in my voluminous "unread" archives already.
Do you like Greg Benford's books?
To: Professional Engineer
FEAR is a terrific horror novel. It's funny how many people I've encountered who trash Hubbard's writing and then add "Except Fear, THAT was good."
To: Hacksaw
The Baen Mafia:
David Weber
David Drake
Travis Taylor
John Ringo
Steve White
Eric Flint (even though he's a commie pinko)
Baen generally puts out SOMETHING I want to buy, at least once per month.
258
posted on
08/21/2006 6:30:28 AM PDT
by
Little Ray
(If you want to be a martyr, we want to martyr you.)
To: MarkL
Thanks for your comments on Firefly. Too many people who liked it just said to me "You didn't LIKE IT?! What's WRONG with you?!"
I borrowed the whole run of the show and watched all but one or two eps which I couldn't see because the DVD was damaged. I enjoyed a lot of the one-liners, and the characters showed potential, but I just didn't see a lot of There there. You mention, for example, Ron Glass's character maybe not being a Shepard. OK, but is that really anything beyond the most basic characterization? Someone presents himself as one thing, but may be a former soldier or spy or something--well, that's not particularly deep, or original.
I liked how there was no sound in space, for example, but then they have people shot with hand-held rifles and go flying like they'd been hit with rockets. Silly. That every planet looks like the same "old west" setting is beyond silly. Planets just don't all look the same or have the same conditions.
The "special" girl/boy cliche is so unbelievably tired by now that I was getting really frustrated with that character and her wimpy brother. It's always funny to me in these post-Buffy times to see hot or cute chicks kicking all kinds of ass. It's a nice girl-empowermentfantasy but I was led to believe this show tried a more believable approach to space opera. It didn't, its cliches were just different from the ones, say, Star Trek uses.
I'm not hating the show, btw--I think it's OK. But it's just nothing special. I think it's too bad the eps were run in the wrong order, and have no idea why the network didn't try to give the show some support. But to be honest, if I were running the network, I wouldn't see a reason to continue it, either. It just wasn't all that interesting to me because the potential that is clearly there was not used in those opening 13 episodes. Usually when a show takes forever to get going, it isn't really going anywhere.
I will see the Serenity movie, though, just to see if there's any sense of conclusion to the story. And thanks again for your thoughtful post.
To: JockoManning
"Conquistador: A Novel of Alternate History S.M. Stirling was fun, but it dragged in some parts." If you liked that one, try Island in the Sea of Time it is a far better book, I have read it several times and love all the books in the series as well as the "flipside" story Dies the Fire.
Also another excellent series (so far) is Weapons of Choice (The Axis of Time Trilogy) by John Birmingham.
All of the above are excellent alternate history novels.
260
posted on
08/21/2006 6:49:10 AM PDT
by
Mad Dawgg
("`Eddies,' said Ford, `in the space-time continuum.' `Ah,' nodded Arthur, `is he? Is he?'")
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