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Top 100 Science Fiction/Fantasy books
NPR ^ | 8/11/11 | NPR

Posted on 08/11/2011 5:46:33 PM PDT by Tanniker Smith

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To: Former Proud Canadian

I’d choose Sixth Column over Farnham’s Freehold if I was adding another Heinlein to the list. Or The Door Into Summer, maybe.


61 posted on 08/11/2011 6:52:47 PM PDT by Kellis91789 (There's a reason the mascot of the Democratic Party is a jackass.)
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To: driftdiver

Forever War was amazing. Forever Peace sucked though. IMHO


62 posted on 08/11/2011 6:53:18 PM PDT by RobRoy (The US today: Revelation 18:4)
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To: FredZarguna
Correction: Donaldson's first Chronicles come in at #58. Still a disgrace.

Wicked? Wicked!?

63 posted on 08/11/2011 6:56:32 PM PDT by FredZarguna (No AE Van Vogt? No JG Ballard? But _Wicked_? OK. that's about all I can take... NPR audience...)
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To: glasseye

“I am surprised any of Heinlein’s books made an NPR list, he did not care much for pansy socialist types.”

Did you know he actually ran for political office as a socialist ? He was also a staffer when Upton Sinclair ran for governor of CA on a socialist platform (although he ran on the Dem ticket) in 1934.

I’ve read everything Heinlein ever wrote and I was shocked when I found out he’d once been a socialist.


64 posted on 08/11/2011 6:57:53 PM PDT by Kellis91789 (There's a reason the mascot of the Democratic Party is a jackass.)
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To: jocon307
Children of Men is also surprising in that several of these books are only on the list because they were well known movies -- which like PD James' title -- had little [if anything] to do with the book.
65 posted on 08/11/2011 6:58:54 PM PDT by FredZarguna (No AE Van Vogt? No JG Ballard? But _Wicked_? OK. that's about all I can take... NPR audience...)
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To: Kellis91789
I would recommend the series by Daniel Keys Moran that includes Emerald Eyes, The Long Run, and Last Dancer. Tough to find as they’ve been out of print for twenty years.

I'm friends with DKM on facebook and Google+, big lib but great writer. All of his books are available as ebooks at fsand.com (his site), and he's released the first book of AI Wars - The Big Boost - another great one.

66 posted on 08/11/2011 6:59:06 PM PDT by msgt (Press any key to continue...Press any other key to quit.)
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To: RobRoy

The quality of Joe Haldeman’s stuff was all over the place.


67 posted on 08/11/2011 6:59:51 PM PDT by FredZarguna (No AE Van Vogt? No JG Ballard? But _Wicked_? OK. that's about all I can take... NPR audience...)
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To: Tanniker Smith

Not a good list. Very heavy on NPR listener-type crap.


68 posted on 08/11/2011 6:59:50 PM PDT by pabianice (")
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To: RobRoy

The quality of Joe Haldeman’s stuff was all over the place.


69 posted on 08/11/2011 7:00:06 PM PDT by FredZarguna (No AE Van Vogt? No JG Ballard? But _Wicked_? OK. that's about all I can take... NPR audience...)
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To: ChildOfThe60s

Excerpt from “The Genre Artist”, an excellent Vance profile in the NY Times Mag, July 2009:

“Jack Vance, described by his peers as “a major genius” and “the greatest living writer of science fiction and fantasy,” has been hidden in plain sight for as long as he has been publishing — six decades and counting. Yes, he has won Hugo, Nebula and World Fantasy awards and has been named a Grand Master by the Science Fiction and Fantasy Writers of America, and he received an Edgar from the Mystery Writers of America, but such honors only help to camouflage him as just another accomplished genre writer. So do the covers of his books, which feature the usual spacecraft, monsters and euphonious place names: Lyonesse, Alastor, Durdane. If you had never read Vance and were browsing a bookstore’s shelf, you might have no particular reason to choose one of his books instead of one next to it by A. E. van Vogt, say, or John Varley. And if you chose one of these alternatives, you would go on your way to the usual thrills with no idea that you had just missed out on encountering one of American literature’s most distinctive and undervalued voices.

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/19/magazine/19Vance-t.html?pagewanted=all


70 posted on 08/11/2011 7:01:47 PM PDT by Third Person
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To: Tanniker Smith

I can’t believe the first real space opera is not on the list: EE Doc Smith’s “Skylark” and “Lensman” series.

And “20,000 Leagues Under the Sea” doesn’t qualify as some of the best SF of all time ?


71 posted on 08/11/2011 7:02:17 PM PDT by Kellis91789 (There's a reason the mascot of the Democratic Party is a jackass.)
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To: ChildOfThe60s
I didn't much care for The Book of Skulls, but The World Inside and Nightwings were outstanding, and his short work ["Hawksbill Station," "In Entropy's Jaws", ...] was fantastic.
72 posted on 08/11/2011 7:03:06 PM PDT by FredZarguna (No AE Van Vogt? No JG Ballard? But _Wicked_? OK. that's about all I can take... NPR audience...)
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To: FredZarguna

It’s pretty easy to spot which entries are on the list solely due to typical NPR listeners picking out the few titles they actually recognized....


73 posted on 08/11/2011 7:03:33 PM PDT by Eepsy
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To: JMS
Yep, David Weber’s Honor Harrington series would have been nice, as well as John Ringo's Gust Front and follow ups.

I couldn't stand LOTR, but I've read all 14 (or so) books in Asimov's Galactic Empire series and all of the Dune books and the subsequent off shoots.

74 posted on 08/11/2011 7:05:09 PM PDT by EN1 Sailor (I saw the best minds of my generation destroyed by madness)
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To: Tanniker Smith

Hey while I’ve got everyone SCIFI/Fantasy here - does anyone remember a short story about an astronaut in a space suit that suddenly thinks he’s have a malfunction or alien infection that once he gets back into the ship finds out it was only the ship’s cat that found it’s way into the suit?

It was in a short story collection I found in the 80’s that I can’t find anymore and I’ve been dying to give it to my kids to read.

Any directional pointers appreciated.


75 posted on 08/11/2011 7:09:44 PM PDT by reed13
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To: FredZarguna

It’s been several decades since I read The Book of Skulls. Might be interesting to go back and see how it would seem to me now.

I have read Dying Inside several times over a long time, and still found it good. Whereas I loaned it to my daughter and she found it uninteresting.


76 posted on 08/11/2011 7:11:34 PM PDT by ChildOfThe60s ( If you can remember the 60s....you weren't really there)
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To: EN1 Sailor

If John Ringo had made the list I think the NPR editorial room would have looked like a scene out of Scanners....


77 posted on 08/11/2011 7:14:40 PM PDT by Eepsy
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To: FredZarguna
I know it's NPR, but Le Guin ahead of the Silmarillion?

It's not a critics' list, it's a readers' list.
Seriously, how many people have even read (or should I say "attempted to read") The Silmarillion?
If you haven't read it, you aren't likely to put it in your top five picks.

And I don't know how how humor and hard sci-fi were on the list, but if you focus the humor votes onto one book, Hitchhikers would be it.

78 posted on 08/11/2011 7:15:39 PM PDT by Tanniker Smith (I didn't know she was a liberal when I married her.)
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To: msgt

I exchanged a few e-mails with DKM about fifteen years ago, and I’ve visited his blog a few times. He does come off as very liberal.

Thanks for the heads up on “AI War” but I refuse to read a novel electronically. I need a real book.


79 posted on 08/11/2011 7:15:46 PM PDT by Kellis91789 (There's a reason the mascot of the Democratic Party is a jackass.)
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To: reed13

Is this it?

http://hermiene.net/short-stories/haunted_space_suit.html


80 posted on 08/11/2011 7:17:20 PM PDT by Eepsy
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