What's the big Ursula k. Le Guin, Hobbit? Can't think of anything she's written that is that long...And here's the more recent editions...View attachment 402
Looks like The Wind's Twelve Quarters and The Compass Rose -- a twofer.What's the big Ursula k. Le Guin, Hobbit? Can't think of anything she's written that is that long...
Ahhhhh.Looks like The Wind's Twelve Quarters and The Compass Rose -- a twofer.
Yeah: what Matthew said. Released here in the UK a couple of months ago. Gollancz are in the process of re-releasing Ursula's books as omnibuses (omnibii?) at the moment.What's the big Ursula k. Le Guin, Hobbit?
One day I will get a full set...)
Yes, got some of those as well, Jim. And the copies that were released as trade paperbacks with the big yellow Gollancz covers...Ah, the lure of having a complete set.
Yes, definitely agree on that front. And you can get a taste of a wide variety of sub-genres from the list, which is helpful. Found some of my favourites through SF Masterworks, e.g. Mockingbird, which would likely still be out of print without them.Yeah: what Matthew said. Released here in the UK a couple of months ago. Gollancz are in the process of re-releasing Ursula's books as omnibuses (omnibii?) at the moment.
Have found a couple of others in the Hobbit vaults now that I'm rooting around a bit - Rogue Moon, Algis Budrys, a couple of Arthur C Clarke's (Fountains of Paradise & Rendezvous with Rama) and a few Philip K Dick. Never a big fan of his novels, mind, which is why there are so many missing in these editions. Now feeling that I have to fill the gaps in, for completed-ness!
But as was said in the earlier post, IMO they're not a bad place to start, if not quite to everyone's tastes.
Increasingly less and less, I'm afraid. There is so much new stuff (not that I'm complaining!) that the old stuff becomes increasingly forgotten.Older is relative, of course, don't most of us read things MUCH older and still enjoy them?!
Never a big fan of his novels, mind, which is why there are so many missing in these editions.
Increasingly less and less, I'm afraid. There is so much new stuff (not that I'm complaining!) that the old stuff becomes increasingly forgotten.
Personally I do like a lot of the old stuff, even with its faults, most of which I can forgive. I know people who dislike Asimov's Foundation and whilst I understand Art's take on The Forever War, I still think its great. But 'of a certain time', as it were.
Relating this to the original post, any of these are worth a try: but I'll be surprised if you'd like them all. (See previous comment about my aversion to PKD novels...)
Yeah, I sympathize with that gripe. I suppose they pick partly for cultural significance as well as either literary or popular merit...which is why Dick is so overrepresented.Agreed. The preponderance of Dick, especially his later work, is perhaps my own greatest gripe with the Masterworks. I appreciate that Gollancz are limited to those novels that they can obtain publication rights to but , really, they couldn't find anything better than VALIS?
The preponderance of Dick, especially his later work, is perhaps my own greatest gripe with the Masterworks. I appreciate that Gollancz are limited to those novels that they can obtain publication rights to but , really, they couldn't find anything better than VALIS
No Disch on there, right? For sure I would like to see him. And more Vance and Pohl. CJ Cherryh, Octavia Butler and more women in general would be good.They are popular, and if Gollancz did not have rights then I guess none of Dick's work would be seen in the UK. I accept that there are plenty of other authors though that I'd like to see in that list. I know (having talked to staff at Gollancz) that there are books they'd love to add but have no rights to.
Other authors I'd like to see there? Hmm. John Wyndham, perhaps other John Brunner, Cyril Kornbluth... any other suggestions?
This is a difficult question because science, science fiction and society have changed since I discovered SF literature. But no matter what, cybernetics has become part of society and "society" must decide where to go with it.
So for the current zeitgeist: Ready Player One by Ernest Cline
90s flashback Diamond Age by Neal Stephenson
70s flashback: The Two Faces of Tomorrow by James P. Hogan
http://www.sfreviews.net/2faces.html
50s flashback: The Door into Summer by Robert A. Heinlein
I have read each of them multiple times.
Who is "society"?
psik
I have long been a fan of sci-fi in movies and tv shows, but just recently started reading sci-fi classics. But they are so many, and so many different themes.
Can you give me some advices, on when to start? I'm looking for the main books of the different themes of sci-fi, cyberpunk, space opera, dystopia, etc..
No 1980's flashback? It could not have been that bad of a decade.![]()
No Disch on there, right? For sure I would like to see him.
