Posted on 05/23/2008 10:02:34 AM PDT by GSWarrior
There must be a lot of SF fans here. Who are you favorite authors or books? What are you currently reading?
I enjoy SF books that focus on character development over hard scifi themes. Robert Silverberg, IMO, is about the best there is. I also enjoy Gardner Duzois' short stories--some gut-wrenching stuff. Jack Vance's are also very entertaining. Orson Scott Card is pretty good too.
I am currently reading Altered Carbon, by Richard Morgan...it's kind of slow and hard to follow. Not likely to read his other novels.
I have enjoyed some, but not all, of Niven and Pournelle's works.
In terms of Fantasy..
Weis & Hickman and Tad Williams
Al Gore isn’t in the same class as the other two. They made their stuff up by themselves. Al Gore just hitched a ride on a wagon already moving, and became the driver.
Is Terry Pratchett worthwhile? I get a sense he is anti-religion. Not sure I want to read him.
I love the Man-Kzin War series.
And Prayers for the Assassin by Robert Ferrigno. Sequel was good and a third is coming out.
Orson Scott Card's Alvin the Maker series.
And I still have a soft spot for Podkayne of Mars.
Here's a question - what are the biggest unanticipated changes in SF, from 70, 50, 30 years ago? I vote for the changed role of women, and the ubiquity of computers, as opposed to robots.
anybody here ever read The Master and Margarita by Mikhail Bulgakov? very strange... very Russian...
All of them! :)
I used to like Turtledove until I read his World War series. I haven’t read anything by him since.
Was there ever a more loathsome protagonist than Sam Yeager?
R.A. Lafferty, Theodore Sturgeon, Robert Aickman.
:’D
I read Diskworld a long time ago, but I never pick up any other of his books, so I cannot say..
OK, Asimov and Clarke are superlative, if you like the hard edged type. Clarke’s City at the End of Time, and Asimov’s Foundation and Robot series, with the last few books merging the themes, though his later work didn’t have the fullness of the earlier stuff.
Another honorable mention, mostly forgotten, is Brian Aldiss’ Trilogy of a planet subject to climatological extremes - Helliconia Spring, Summer and Winter, the first being the best, IMO.
Haven’t read much of it lately.
I haven’t read Gripping Hand because it got horrible reviews. I recommend Niven’s Known Space books (particularly Ringworld, Ringworld Engineers, A World of Ptaavs, and various short story collections) and Pournelle’s King David’s Spaceship, also set in the same universe as Mote. Legacy of Heorot is pretty good but I’ve heard mixed things about the sequel.
Consider a recent book called Zig-Zag translated from Spanish.
James Hogan has a series of books and a website. And they are great!
Philip K. Dick.
William Gibson
Mote in God’s Eye..one of the best. I agree with Gripping Hand..not too good, loved Footfall, never met anyone else that had ever read it.
J. Michael Straczynski
However, he’s more of a writer than an author.
Only writer in the history of TV to write EVERY show for an entire season (I believe Season 3, “Babylon 5”).
You forgot Mohamed (piss be upon him).
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