Recommendations

Alan Dean Foster

I finished The Service of the Sword: Worlds of Honor 4 by David Weber. It's the fourth World of Honor series and pretty good reading. I recommend it (and the series) to anyone that likes Weber and hasn't read it.

Any Alan Dean Foster readers here? I'm thinking about reading Diuturnity's Dawn. Thumbs up?
 
Alan Dean Foster

I don't know that book, but the Spellsinger series was excellent ! It's magical fantasy stuff, and really well done. A sanitation engineer gets brought to another world of talking animals, where he can do magic by singing. It should be awful, but Foster gets away with it with his sense of self-irony. What's the standard civic role of skunks ? Riot control, duh !
The series degrades over time (what series doesn't), but I really enjoyed the first 2-3.
 
Can't add too much more to the list of good choices above, but one author worth checking out is John Sladek (Roderick at Random, Roderick and Tik-Tok).

Now sadly deceased, he stands as one of the funniest SF writers I have ever read.

Cordwainer Smith’s Norstrilia, as well his other Instrumentality short stories (who could forget the grisly A Planet Named Shayol?).

Greg Benford’s Timescape

Any Stanislaw Lem novel really (I guess Solaris is the starting point).
 
I will add a few recent books to my list:


Ilium by Dan Simmons
The Golden Age by John Wright

I will also say that I have read Sladek's Tik-Tok, and enjoyed it. I found the social satire a bit dated though and so not as funny as I was expecting.
 
I wish there were a combined sf/fantasy good books thread. To me, the most important thing is that someone has taken the time to create a believable world or system of ideas. But just so I don't rock the boat too much, I'm splitting my post between the two respective universes.

Favorite sf books / authors of all time:

1. Iain M. Banks (anything in the culture series, The Player of Games and Use of Weapons being my favorites);

2. Octavia Butler (specifically the Wild Seed / PatternMaster foursome);

3. Dan Simmons (Hyperion);

4. Frank Herbert -- Dune, the original, not the knockoffs; and

5. Poul Anderson -- The Boat of a Million Years.

Those come to mind immediately.
 
I'll use this thread to promote one of my favourite contemporary authors:

Ian MacDonald

My personal recommendations would be:

Speaking in Tongues: Short Story collection.

Sacrifice of Fools: Alien refugees in contemporary London

Scissors Cut Paper Wrap Stone: Inventor of "Kabuki Man" comics goes on a spiritual quest, to come to terms with the ultimately suggestive signs he tattoed to his hands (one can heal, the other kill - instantly).

He's one of SF's best stylists, so be prepared for beautiful language.

I hope some of you will buy his books, so he makes some more money and goes on writing. ;)
 
As far as crossing over between sci-fi and fantasy, I would recommend one book that takes it to a new level. Shaturanga is the title. I can't really compare it to anything out there, but whether you want to explore deep human conflicts or just read a quick, intriguing, power-packed adventure, Shaturanga is the novel.
 
I have removed the last post, as this was a FANTASY book in the SF Forum. As your link shows, it is a Fantasy novel, and not a 'crossover'. You have already mentioned your liking of the book in the Fantasy Forum, Siren. ;)

Hobbit
 
Hello, this is my first post on this message board.

My two favourite Science Fiction books are:

Earth Abides by George R. Stewart and The Sheep Look Up by John Brunner.

They are absolutely brilliant and well worth reading.
 
Originally posted by The One
Earth Abides by George R. Stewart and The Sheep Look Up by John Brunner.

They are absolutely brilliant and well worth reading.

They are also two of the most wrist-cuttingly depressing books ever conceived by SF.

<grin>
 
Originally posted by Mugwump


They are also two of the most wrist-cuttingly depressing books ever conceived by SF.

<grin>

What about James Morrow's This is the Way the World Ends? I mean, as a
wrist-cuttingly depressing book
 
hmm, interesting. Anybody notice some significant absences from all this ?
Although a lot of people are plumping for the 'old' on the 'old vs new' thread, the grand masters aren't getting much of a look-in. Bradbury got 1 vote for the Martian Chronicles, Asimov got a couple for the Foundation Series, Clarke got one or two (and didn't get 2001 or the Fountains of Paradise (a personal fave)). Oddly (and based on a very quick run-through), Heinlein seems to have aged the best. He's probably the least self-important of this group, which might explain it (that would also explain why Asimov hasn't aged particularly well).

oh, and yes, John Brunner is incredibly depressing. His 'Stand on Zanzibar' had me convinced that the world was going to hell (he might be right, of course). Jem, by F. Pohl is a close runner-up, though.
 
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Here are a few books that SF reader would like.

Dragons Eye-Ann McCaffrey
The Ship Who Sang-Ann McCaffrey
The Morpheus Maneuver-Nadine Hendricks

I think these would be a good place to start for those new to SF.
 
Originally posted by confused
oh, and yes, John Brunner is incredibly depressing. His 'Stand on Zanzibar' had me convinced that the world was going to hell (he might be right, of course). Jem, by F. Pohl is a close runner-up, though.

Yes, Jem really is soul-destroying stuff. I can only assume that Pohl was suffering from acute depression when he wrote it.
 
Wow, what a great vareity of reccomendations!

I would like to add two old authors and one new author:

Cordwainer Smith: His stories are quite unique in science fiction. They deal with a far-future humanity coming to terms with re-discovering their own human nature. The stories range from the nightmarish to the whimsical and are always an arresting read.

Eric Frank Russell: He wrote swashbuckling tales of bold earthmen in sspace, laced with lots of humor and a grip on deeper notions than the 'conquest of space'.

Ken MacLeod: Bright, shiny, up to date! Among other thngs, he depicts a future based on different kinds of political systems, including socialism and anarchism. The tech-spec ranges from nanotech, cloning and virtual reality to good old standards like FTL and so on. Again, there is a lot of humour in his books,

I haven't mentioned specific books because I wanted to give more of a heads-up on the author's overall body of work.
 
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Knives, I'll heartily second Cordwainer Smith. I know he's obscure and all, but everyone here should read his stuff. He was a master. His stuff still stands out as some of the most unique and amazing that I've ever read. All Hail! :D

(He's also a total sentimental favorite of mine. My Dad introduced me to this author when I was a pretty young teenager just starting in SF. Thus he was the first really "deep" character SF guy who also had the big ideas that I read. Previously I'd been into Asimov and Clarke and that ilk; always good, but Smith was quite different from that.)
 
Glad to see another Cordwainer Smith fan. :)

Smith was a big leap for me, in SF.

Like many others, I'd read some Asimov, Clarke and Bradbury as a child, and bit of the better known authors like Herbert, Gibson, Zelazny and so on later, but had drifted away from the genre for quite a while. A couple of years back,Istarted hanging around the SF shelves again, looking for something interesting. One of the books I picked at this time was a collection of stories by Cordwainer Smith. Not only did they introduce me to a writer who has emerged as a prennial favourite, they also helped get me back into regualrly reading SF - a genre that can attract a writer like him surely is worth reading?!
 
Yes, chalk me up as another fan of Cordwainer Smith.

His work might well detail the stomach-churningly gruesome, but he was without doubt fiercely original, and his stories remain prominent in memory whilst others from more ‘luminous’ authors fade into obscurity,
 
Cordwainer Smith! Now we're talking. Not hard to read all of his SF stuff though. I'm pretty sure he only wrote two in the genre before he died. Here's some others I haven't heard get a mention so far:

Luficer's Hammer - Niven/Pournelle
The Helliconia series - Brian Aldiss
A Scanner Darkly - Phillip K Dick
 

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