View Full Version : Sci-fi me
Heck_Tate
2008-10-06, 12:07
Looking for some reccomendations for some good, believable sci-fi. None of this 100 years in the future and the human race has mastered time and space travel shit. Believable is the key.
Last stuff I read was the Otherland series and Illium. Something along those lines is excellent
People are always telling me to read something by Greg Bear. Science fiction isn't my cup of tea, but it's a recommendation that comes from people that are big on this sort of thing.
Psychonautical
2008-10-07, 00:31
William Gibson if you liked Otherland. Not exactly the same thing, as Gibson is more CyberPunk, but it's amazing to read.
Maybe some Philip K. Dick as well.
Thought Riot
2008-10-07, 01:57
Neuromancer
Vanhalla
2008-10-07, 04:09
For some Hard Sci-fi go with Stephen Baxter
lan_rogers_book
2008-10-07, 12:22
The un-debatable greatest Sci-Fi of all time is without a doubt Dune, by Frank Herbert (the first one, not the carp his son wrote) the only down side is that it's set millions of years in the future, a plus for me but might be a turn off for others. The technology in the book is interesting, more advanced in most respects but military tech is atom bombs and melee weapons.
Heck_Tate
2008-10-07, 20:48
Not a big fan of the Dune stuff. I tried the Neuromancer trilogy a few years ago but it was too complicated. Concepts seemed good though. If I can pick up a copy again I'll definitely give it another go
moonmeister
2008-10-08, 00:48
Lois McMaster Bujold, her "Vorkosigan" series. Larry Niven, "Lucifer's Hammer", "Ringworld", "A Gift From Earth", "Protector", "A Mote In God's Eye", etc. Anything by Robert Heinlein that is "juvenile" & published before 1970: "Red Planet", "Podkayne of Mars", "Tunnel in the Sky", "Space Cadet", "Door Into Summer" etc.
eesakiwi
2008-10-08, 05:13
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mars_Trilogy
Red Mars.
This is a great book, its 'Science Faction' The next two are great too but can't match the groundbreaking work done in Red Mars.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Quiet_Earth
'Quiet Earth' by Craig Harrison, hesaKiwi too. Its also a Film with Bruno lawrence in it.
For some Hard Sci-fi go with Stephen Baxter
I love Baxter's stuff, but it tends to get really, really depressing.
moonmeister
2008-10-12, 05:59
LM Bujold's "Borders of Infinity" about "Quaddies": people genetically engineered with two extra sets of arms in place of legs for free fall, is interesting. I quite like when a woman hits the "Bad Boss" with a wrench, a guard who (everybody turns against the BB!) says, "Don't hit him like that! Hit him like this!" :D
Heck_Tate
2008-10-12, 17:38
LM Bujold's "Borders of Infinity" about "Quaddies": people genetically engineered with two extra sets of arms in place of legs for free fall, is interesting. I quite like when a woman hits the "Bad Boss" with a wrench, a guard who (everybody turns against the BB!) says, "Don't hit him like that! Hit him like this!" :D
that sounds pretty good.
the books i ended up picking up were Octavia Butler's Xenogenesis trilogy about an alien race with 3 sexes that ends up saving the few remaining people left on earth after humans all nuke each other. Pretty cool stuff. Alot of the bio-engineering stuff since their 3rd sex naturally takes genes from any living thing it encounters and mixes it with its own and other species' to create crazy living things.
A Clockwork Pumelo
2008-10-12, 17:43
It's not exactly sci fi, but Slaughterhouse 5 is good, and it does have aliens and time travel. So far, it's the only book I've ever liked that I've been forced to read for school.
ComradeAsh
2008-10-12, 19:02
Ambush at Corellia.
Ambush at Corellia.
Star Wars FTW.
idislikefatties
2008-10-13, 22:53
Samuel R. Delaney's: Dhalgren or Russell Hoban's: Ridley Walker
ilikepoison
2008-10-13, 23:03
a book on scientology :p
flatplat
2008-10-15, 11:17
It's not exactly sci fi, but Slaughterhouse 5 is good, and it does have aliens and time travel. So far, it's the only book I've ever liked that I've been forced to read for school.
I'd recommend this too. Any chance to push Vonnegut onto people.
Heck_Tate
2008-10-15, 12:09
I'd recommend this too. Any chance to push Vonnegut onto people.
I'm already well versed in Vonnegut. That guy's the fucking man. I loved Slaughterhouse 5 but I think I liked Sirens of Titan better
lan_rogers_book
2008-10-22, 19:06
Try "The Merchant and the Alchemist's Gate" its a short novella but I liked it and it won the hugo (and maybe nebula) award(s)
Also don't laugh but planet of the apes was pretty good.
ps. I wouldn't conciser 1984 sci-fi, good but not sci-fi
NoToFThisWorld
2008-10-25, 22:04
"Rendezvous With Rama" is very good. Arthur C Clarke. Pass on the sequels.
"I, Robot" is always a classic by Isaac Asimov. Also from Asimov, the main 3 "Foundation" novels (that is Foundation, Foundation and Empire, & Second Foundation) are terrific books.
I'm looking at reading the Red Mars, Blue Mars, & Green Mars trilogy for my next sci-fi adventure.
Cooking with Zyklon B
2008-10-26, 17:13
Enders Game by Orson Scott Card. It's one of those books that wasn't on my HS reading list, but should. It sure kicked the ass out of any of the books I read off their shitlist.
And if you like Enders Game, don't be shy about picking up the rest of the Ender series.
If you want believability, Harry Turtledove does an excellent job with alternate history and scifi.
If you wanna take a gander at his works, I'd suggest In The Presence of Mine Enemy as a starter. It's about jews living in Nazi Germany and surviving by emulating as much as they can.
He does a great job in my opinion with his world war themed books, where in one series he chronicles from the American Civil War (in a what if the south had won), through world war II and beyond.
The names of the books escape me, but they are sitting in my room collecting dust. If you're interested, I'll dig up the names.