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22nd April 2007, 9:44am
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#1 | | Registered User
Join Date: Mar 2006
Posts: 671
| Science fiction I can't say I've ever read anything in this genre and I didn't think much of it. However, I was having a conversation with some random person and they got me quite intrigued. Does anyone have any recommendations? He said the best sci fi writing was around the 50s and complained about the writing today. He did give me the name of some authors to check out but I have completely forgotten. I'm not really interested in wars with aliens etc, he talked about one book that was examining what it is to be human. Anyway, any recommendations?
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22nd April 2007, 10:11am
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#2 | | Forever Waiting.
Join Date: Nov 2004 Location: Glasgow
Posts: 3,982
| Re: Science fiction I'd recommend reading some asimov. the original foundation series especially.
the period from the 30's to the 50's is referred to as the golden age of science fiction. wikipedia has a great list of the authors who where writing at that time. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Golden_...cience_fiction
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22nd April 2007, 10:13am
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#3 | | Bring the heid o' charlie Editor
Join Date: Oct 2003 Location: Staley Road
Posts: 10,269
| Re: Science fiction Most scifi is trash with the marketplace at the beck and call of fat fucks who like Star Wars.
The old guard born of the post pilp paperback boom include Isaac Asimov, Arthur C Clarke, Robert Heinlein,Harlan Ellison, Fritz Leiber, L Sprague De Camp, Henry Kuttner.
I can't advise on any individual books as I don't read the genre. |
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22nd April 2007, 10:54am
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#4 | | I hate your band SuperMod
Join Date: Dec 2001 Location: Slacktivism
Posts: 33,373
| Re: Science fiction I was a wee kid when I was into reading that sort of stuff, but the ones that stand out in my memory are the holy trinity of Asimov, Heinlein and Clarke.
__________________ The interval between birth and death is fractal. Any given moment is infinitely deep and rich, and therefore one lifetime is quite enough for me. |
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22nd April 2007, 10:56am
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#5 | | Bring the heid o' charlie Editor
Join Date: Oct 2003 Location: Staley Road
Posts: 10,269
| Re: Science fiction The stories I enjoyed the most were shorts, think you can get a mammmoth collection of old sci fi shorts in print |
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22nd April 2007, 10:59am
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#6 | | I hate your band SuperMod
Join Date: Dec 2001 Location: Slacktivism
Posts: 33,373
| Re: Science fiction I, Robot is a good book of Asimov shorts.
__________________ The interval between birth and death is fractal. Any given moment is infinitely deep and rich, and therefore one lifetime is quite enough for me. |
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22nd April 2007, 11:44am
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#7 | | STEVE HOLT!
Join Date: May 2001 Location: London
Posts: 5,958
| Re: Science fiction And likewise, Minority Report is an enjoyable collection of Philip K. Dick's stuff. |
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22nd April 2007, 11:47am
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#8 | | Registered User
Join Date: Dec 2003
Posts: 26,956
| Re: Science fiction Quote:
Originally Posted by Charlie Parker The stories I enjoyed the most were shorts, think you can get a mammmoth collection of old sci fi shorts in print | Aye, shorts got me into Sci-Fi back in the day. I think one of the first collections I got were by Ray Bradbury, called The Martian Chronicles. |
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22nd April 2007, 12:23pm
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#9 | | Better not to err
Join Date: Apr 2002 Location: Glesgae
Posts: 28,211
| Re: Science fiction Mick Farren Phaid The Gambler Exit Funtopia The Armageddon Crazy
Norman Spinrad Little Heroes Bug Jack Barron
Philip K. Dick A Scanner Darkly Do Androids Dream Of Electric Sheep
Neil Stephenson The Diamond Age: or A Young Lady's illustrated Primer
Iain M. Banks The Player Of Games Use Of Weapons Against a Dark Background
Robert Sheckley Mindswap The Status Civilisation The Alchemical Marriage of Alistair Crompton
Roger Zelazny Damnation Alley Lord Of Light
With the exception of Iain Banks, most of my favourite sci-fi authors did their best work in the 60s and 70s. I loved the older stuff growing up (Heinlein, Asimov etc) but to be honest it seems a little turgid to me now. |
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22nd April 2007, 12:44pm
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#10 | | The Oncoming Storm Editor Moderator
Join Date: Jan 2005 Location: RFS Ravager
Posts: 15,718
| Re: Science fiction There's a series of books called the SF Masterworks collection. It's made up of 60 odd books by roughly the same number of authors. Most of them are pretty good and it keeps hard to find sci-fi classics in print and circulation.
You can't go wrong with Arthur C Clark's short stories or Philip K Dick. Iain M Banks' stuff is amazing, but not the easiest to get into at first.
__________________ Drinking blows my brains out. It blows out all the crap in my head and allows new and better ideas to seep in. |
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22nd April 2007, 12:46pm
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#11 | | Better not to err
Join Date: Apr 2002 Location: Glesgae
Posts: 28,211
| Re: Science fiction Quote:
Originally Posted by Hammer You can't go wrong with Arthur C Clark's short stories or Philip K Dick. Iain M Banks' stuff is amazing, but not the easiest to get into at first. | Out of the three writers mentioned you think Banks is going to be hard for a non-sf reader to get into? |
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22nd April 2007, 12:48pm
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#12 | | The Oncoming Storm Editor Moderator
Join Date: Jan 2005 Location: RFS Ravager
Posts: 15,718
| Re: Science fiction Quote:
Originally Posted by MarkMono Out of the three writers mentioned you think Banks is going to be hard for a non-sf reader to get into? | Same goes for some of Dick's stuff, but not all of it (in my experience). Clark is pretty easy to get into - he doesn't have the same kind of head fucks that Banks and Dick excel at.
__________________ Drinking blows my brains out. It blows out all the crap in my head and allows new and better ideas to seep in. |
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22nd April 2007, 12:53pm
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#13 | | Better not to err
Join Date: Apr 2002 Location: Glesgae
Posts: 28,211
| Re: Science fiction Ah, right, I find books without any 'head-fucks' to be pretty dry.
I think it goes with the territory when you have a history of mental illness. |
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