Anonymous wrote:I'm writing down my list of books I want to read in 2023 and would like to finally include a good science fiction book, or series of books.
My experience with the genre is pretty light, in spite of the fact that I hold two science degrees.
Titles I'm considering:
The Foundation series by Asimov
Ringworld series by Niven
Space Odyssey series by Clarke
Dune series by Herbert (I've only read the first book; disinclined to read the posthumous ones written by his son)
Patternist series by Butler
Any that I'm missing that would be worth considering? Thanks in advance.
Anonymous wrote:I'm writing down my list of books I want to read in 2023 and would like to finally include a good science fiction book, or series of books.
My experience with the genre is pretty light, in spite of the fact that I hold two science degrees.
Titles I'm considering:
The Foundation series by Asimov
Ringworld series by Niven
Space Odyssey series by Clarke
Dune series by Herbert (I've only read the first book; disinclined to read the posthumous ones written by his son)
Patternist series by Butler
Any that I'm missing that would be worth considering? Thanks in advance.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What do you like non-sci fi wise, OP? That can help direct my recs.
I liked the political intrigue in Dune, so things along those lines. I appreciate good writing (like an English major wrote it), muti-dimensional characters, intersecting story lines, a plot that moves.
Pretty vanilla, but there you go.
A few more for your list then (if you haven't read them yet):
Hyperion by Dan Simmons
Left Hand of Darkness by Ursula K Le Guin
Cordelia's Honor by Lois McMaster Bujold (or Mirror Dance, same author/series, but I like the Cordelia duo best)
The Goblin Emperor by Katherine Addison
Gideon the Ninth by Tamsin Muir
Haven't read by have heard good things about A Memory Called Empire by Arkady Martine as well other poster's suggestion of Three Body Problem
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What do you like non-sci fi wise, OP? That can help direct my recs.
I liked the political intrigue in Dune, so things along those lines. I appreciate good writing (like an English major wrote it), muti-dimensional characters, intersecting story lines, a plot that moves.
Pretty vanilla, but there you go.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What do you like non-sci fi wise, OP? That can help direct my recs.
I liked the political intrigue in Dune, so things along those lines. I appreciate good writing (like an English major wrote it), muti-dimensional characters, intersecting story lines, a plot that moves.
Pretty vanilla, but there you go.
Anonymous wrote:What do you like non-sci fi wise, OP? That can help direct my recs.
), muti-dimensional characters, intersecting story lines, a plot that moves.
Anonymous wrote:Those are all pretty old school, and I wonder if I'd sign up for a whole series to start. I guess what are you looking for? If it's old school classics I guess you could add Kim Stanley Robinson's series on how we colonize Mars, but if you want some more recent options here are a few I've read lately--
Three Body Problem (written by a scientist so might be good for a scientist??)
Memory Called Empire
Ancillary Justice
Those all are the start of series. Also I like to read lighter ones like Becky Chambers or the Murderbot novellas.
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