thank fuck though, no-one should ever have to read an 11-part series.
― ledge, Friday, 24 June 2011 09:29 (fifteen years ago)
i'm hoping they're all going to be revelation space length 8)
and that i live long enough to read them all.
(only other decalogy i can think of was l ron hubbard)
― koogs, Friday, 24 June 2011 09:44 (fifteen years ago)
i liked that ben bova book! the three book trilogy thing. properly epic and all. and sad. i definitely felt like i was on that damn ship with them for centuries. i like books like that. where you kinda can't believe where it ended up given where it started.
― scott seward, Saturday, 25 June 2011 03:08 (fifteen years ago)
sounds like my kinda thing, will look out for it.
― ledge, Saturday, 25 June 2011 08:38 (fifteen years ago)
i just started this book. had to start somewhere with her! she's only written 34734837442424 books.
http://www.andre-norton.org/coverart_gallery/android_at_arms_1.jpg
http://www.andre-norton.org/coverart_gallery/android_at_arms_2.jpg
― scott seward, Sunday, 26 June 2011 01:51 (fifteen years ago)
i love pictures of andre norton.
http://cdn3.iofferphoto.com/img/item/172/736/495/X24XBq8dGE5osKS.jpg
http://i3.squidoocdn.com/resize/squidoo_images/-1/draft_lens2152220module11280018photo_1220293661AndreNorton-lady04.jpg
― scott seward, Sunday, 26 June 2011 01:55 (fifteen years ago)
huh, i think she taught me second grade
― j., Sunday, 26 June 2011 02:46 (fifteen years ago)
I read "I Am Legend" (or "I AM TEH LEGEND") by Richard Matheson over the weekend. It is really gripping. Some may say, of course, that it is not SF.
in other news, loving the Andre Norton pictures. I would have enjoyed her books even more if I had known what she and her cats look like.
― The New Dirty Vicar, Monday, 27 June 2011 15:37 (fifteen years ago)
I also love the Andre Norton pics.
More AH than SF, but I finished Kingsley Amis' The Alteration recently and enjoyed it greatly. I'm wondering if I should seek out The Anti-Death League or even New Maps of Hell or the Spectrum anthologies he edited (probably out of print at this stage)?
― rener, Monday, 27 June 2011 16:11 (fifteen years ago)
New Maps is very interesting, but obviously about 60 years out of date. His fantasy novel, 'The Green Man', is bloody good, too. Haven't read The Anti-Death League. He did another SF novel, Russian Hide and Seek, about a USSR-invaded UK, which I also haven't read, but is meant to be good.
― I knew that the Russian people mercilessly ograblyali ograblyay (James Morrison), Monday, 27 June 2011 23:57 (fifteen years ago)
i liked 'new maps', but remember not a lot about it: its fannishness, its enthusiasm. not sure what its actual arguments were.
― thomp, Tuesday, 28 June 2011 09:13 (fifteen years ago)
I'm finding "The Snail On The Slope" bu Boris & Arkady Strugatsky slightly hard going, it's written in this pedantic kind of style that just rubs me the wrong way. Maybe because it's in translation? I get the same feeling from Stanislaw Lem sometimes. Could be that translators aren't really writers themselves so don't know how to make it flow.
Speaking of which, are there popular SF or fantasy writers from non-English speaking countries? Not counting Murakami, Kafka etc who only edge onto the genre occasionally. Pretty much all the major names I can think of are native English speakers, it seems weird there aren't more global names.
― Synth Solo (Matt #2), Thursday, 30 June 2011 19:51 (fifteen years ago)
Been reading Lem's 'Memoirs Found in a Bathtub' and you could say it is his own reading of Kafka. Brill!
Many translators are writers, or if they are not they are steeped in literature, or seem v 'literary' (yes those quotes again)
― xyzzzz__, Thursday, 30 June 2011 19:58 (fifteen years ago)
The latest Big Thing is the chap who wrote The Quantum Thief, who is Finnish, but he writes in English
― I knew that the Russian people mercilessly ograblyali ograblyay (James Morrison), Thursday, 30 June 2011 23:55 (fifteen years ago)
The Anti-Death League is not at all science-fiction iirc but very good. (Has an amazing threatening poem from God written in the style of an omnipotent and illiterate schoolyard sadist or bully). The Green Man is, as JM says, marvellous. Russian Hide-and-Seek is risible. I'm not sure whether it's as bad as many say, because I remember thinking some parts were quite good - savoured of It Happened Here slightly I think, but it's all a bit weird and not really in a good way, in a way that sails close to very bad in fact.
― Fizzles the Chimp (GamalielRatsey), Friday, 1 July 2011 06:11 (fifteen years ago)
I thought there had been a thread on foreign language sci-fi, but I must have been thinking of this, which is fairly brief:Is there a German analogue to Jules Verne & H.G. Wells?
I also ordered the Franz Rottensteiner-edited anthology of mainland European SF, "View From Another Shore", after reading James Redd's post on that thread, but have not read it yet. Also unread on my translations of foreign SF pile: "The Invention of Morel" by Adolfo Bioy Casares. I have no excuse for not having read this yet, it's only 100 pages long, if that! Comes with a glowing foreword by Borges too, which is as far as I've got.
Maybe someone who actually reads books instead of just buying them can recommend something.
― jackoff box recorder (a passing spacecadet), Friday, 1 July 2011 08:30 (fifteen years ago)
I finished A Fire Upon the Deep and it was amazing. I've got A Deepness in the Sky queued up but first:
Connie Willis - To Say Nothing About the Dog. I'm about 3/4 through and I love it but I am a sucker for time travel stories set in Victorian England and that particular brand of madcap, everything goes hilariously wrong plot. I will surely circle back to read her other time travel books.
Then I'm taking a turn into spec fic land and reading the new Sookie book and then the new Gail Carriger. I should probably be a little ashamed of my love of those series but I am too thrilled at the prospect of spending a disgustingly hot three-day weekend in a dim, air conditioned apartment and wallowing in genre fiction to feel shame.
Also, Racialicious.com is doing an Octavia Butler bookclub, starting in July with Seed to Harvest - http://www.racialicious.com/2011/06/29/introducing-the-octavia-butler-book-club/. I think I'll use that as an excuse to read the OB books I haven't read yet.
― phantoms from a world gone by speak again the immortal tale: (Jenny), Friday, 1 July 2011 13:40 (fifteen years ago)
Haha I have all the Carriger books and eagerly await them. Bite me, genre purists.
Connie Willis was one of my votes in the "all-time" poll for Doomsday Book, so full steam ahead there too!
― you're in the club and the light hits your ass like pow (Laurel), Friday, 1 July 2011 13:47 (fifteen years ago)
I was hoping you would pipe up with some Carriger love! <3
― phantoms from a world gone by speak again the immortal tale: (Jenny), Friday, 1 July 2011 13:51 (fifteen years ago)
They're getting a little stale, though, I think. The romance part was over with far too early, and the last book felt like hardly anything happened in it. Higher hopes for the next.
― you're in the club and the light hits your ass like pow (Laurel), Friday, 1 July 2011 14:09 (fifteen years ago)
I liked the last one. Hot lesbian spy, rogue vampires, Alexia scorned by polite society. Good stuff. Plus they take about 6 hours to read so if there isn't a huge payoff, I don't feel like I've wasted too much time.
― phantoms from a world gone by speak again the immortal tale: (Jenny), Friday, 1 July 2011 14:21 (fifteen years ago)
non-English sf: this thing looks cool but I haven't read it, either: http://www.amazon.com/Cosmos-Latinos-Anthology-Science-Classics/dp/0819566349/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1309531313&sr=1-1
― CharlieS, Friday, 1 July 2011 14:44 (fifteen years ago)
i just got a paperback of soviet sci-fi short stories. bought 10 or 12 boxes of sci-fi/fantasy books for the store today.
― scott seward, Friday, 1 July 2011 21:07 (fifteen years ago)
Does that paperback have anything by Sever Gansovsky in it?
― Hairdresser on FIOS (James Redd and the Blecchs), Saturday, 2 July 2011 01:58 (fifteen years ago)
it does. a story called *a day of wrath*.
the best thing about these boxes of books, actually, is that they included the original screenplay for the movie CHUD and an early screenplay by Beth B. for the movie that would become Salvation starring Exene Cervanka under its original title The Manipulator.
― scott seward, Saturday, 2 July 2011 12:03 (fifteen years ago)
also got a book that frederik pohl put out in 1986 called tales from the planet earth which is a novel in 19 interlocking stories by writers from different countries. don't know how good it is. writers:
u.s. - frederik pohl
china - ye yonglie
canada - spider robinson
brazil - andre carneiro
thailand - somtow sucharitkul
italy - lino aldani
czechoslovakia - joseph nesvadba
ireland - harry harrison
australia - a. bertram chandler
norway - jon bing
bulgaria - ljuben dilov
england - brian w. aldiss
uruguay - carlos m. federici
poland - janusz a. zajdel
sweden - sam j. lundwall
china - tong enzheng
west germany - karl michael armer
japan - tetsu yano
― scott seward, Saturday, 2 July 2011 14:41 (fifteen years ago)
maybe emailing frederik pohl would be the way to go if you want good tips on international sci-fi. i'd email him pretty fast though...
http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/1/18/Frederik_Pohl_Eaton_2008-05-17.png
― scott seward, Saturday, 2 July 2011 14:43 (fifteen years ago)
"hey, you kids, get off my space lawn!"
http://www.locusmag.com/2009/Issue01_Pohl_260x337.jpg
― scott seward, Saturday, 2 July 2011 14:45 (fifteen years ago)
sorry, that wasn't nice. he deserves a good space cat shot.
http://www.nndb.com/people/728/000023659/pohl-1.jpg
― scott seward, Saturday, 2 July 2011 14:46 (fifteen years ago)
scott, is that soviet scifi one the edited by Theodore Sturgeon one? because that's pretty good, from memory
― I knew that the Russian people mercilessly ograblyali ograblyay (James Morrison), Monday, 4 July 2011 00:09 (fifteen years ago)
Think that one is called Path into the Unknown and is not the Sturgeon one
― Safe European HOOS (James Redd and the Blecchs), Monday, 4 July 2011 00:20 (fifteen years ago)
Sturgeon one seems to have been New Soviet Science Fiction. But I guess we'd better wait for Scott
― Safe European HOOS (James Redd and the Blecchs), Monday, 4 July 2011 00:23 (fifteen years ago)
"Think that one is called Path into the Unknown and is not the Sturgeon one"
yes. this. is the one i have. looks cool. i'm gonna read it.
i really liked that andre norton book i just finished. what a trip. i really just want to take a trip. i don't travel much. don't know what i'll read next. thought i might go on a van vogt spree cuz i got a ton of his paperbacks. was looking at frank herbert's the white plague. might read that. got a couple of PDKs i haven't read. eye in the sky and the crack in space. um, what else? chocky by john wyndham. still want to read that. oh and i'm gonna read the drought by ballard. i've hardly read any of this books. the universe is my oyster when it comes to sci-fi/fantasy. so much i haven't read. its fun!
― scott seward, Monday, 4 July 2011 13:42 (fifteen years ago)
'the loving dead' is maybe a little less literary than i had been led to believe
― thomp, Monday, 4 July 2011 14:02 (fifteen years ago)
first sentence:
"The Sun had set by the time kate left the belly dance class."
eye in the sky and the crack in space both pretty terrible as I remember.I have a Pohl / Kornbluth novel on the way from ebay, think I'll read that and give up on Lanark for the time being.
― 30 minute synth solo (Matt #2), Monday, 4 July 2011 14:21 (fifteen years ago)
thought i might go on a van vogt spree cuz i got a ton of his paperbacks.
the one book of his I read was perhaps the worst novel I have ever encountered, but maybe one of us was having an off day.
was looking at frank herbert's the white plague.
I gather this is one of those things that is entertainingly awful, though it's full depths are only appreciated if you have any actual familiarity with Ireland.
― The New Dirty Vicar, Monday, 4 July 2011 14:30 (fifteen years ago)
i love the van vogt wiki page cuz its filled with quotes from people who loved him and people who hated him. i mean he was obviously very influential to a lot of young writers (like PDK) cuz he was one of the pioneers who let his ideas run rampant instead of just following the script, but critics tend to cringe mightily at how sloppy he could be. i dunno, i can handle sloppy if the ideas are cool. and i want to give all the old dudes their due.
― scott seward, Monday, 4 July 2011 14:47 (fifteen years ago)
At the same time, in his fiction, van Vogt was consistently sympathetic to absolute monarchy as a form of government.[8] This was the case, for instance, in the Weapon Shop series
ORLY?
― ledge, Monday, 4 July 2011 14:50 (fifteen years ago)
lol dv we'll never make a critic of you with that forgiving an outlook
― Darranzhi MacKhakhala (darraghmac), Monday, 4 July 2011 14:54 (fifteen years ago)
Every once in a while try to read van Vogt, but still can't get past the bad writing- Lovecraft he ain't. But if luminaries such as Philip K. Dick, M. John Harrison and Tracer Hand all like him, maybe I need to keep trying. In the introduction to The World of Null-A, van Vogt claims that his work was originally met with universal acclaim, except for one lone hatchet-wielder with a reputation to make, Damon Knight.
― Safe European HOOS (James Redd and the Blecchs), Tuesday, 5 July 2011 00:54 (fifteen years ago)
its kinda like reading a crazy person sometimes. van vogt. in a good way.
― scott seward, Tuesday, 5 July 2011 03:35 (fifteen years ago)
Eye in the Sky feels like a short story idea extended into a novel that he couldn't be arsed to complete. entertaining enough tho.
― Fizzles the Chimp (GamalielRatsey), Monday, 11 July 2011 16:00 (fourteen years ago)
Just finished reading Karen Miller's follow-ups to the Innocent Mage books, The Prodigal Mage and The Reluctant Mage; she is kind of a sadistic writer!
― DJP, Monday, 11 July 2011 16:02 (fourteen years ago)
just had the first two patrick rothfuss books delivered to my kindle by my lil bro, something to look fwd to.
Re-reading of the wheel of time has progressed to bk 11, but that's another thread.
― who shivs a git (darraghmac), Monday, 11 July 2011 16:08 (fourteen years ago)
Dan, you slogged through those?? Christ, well done.
― manager expects you to work past 6PM but won't allow you to change into (Laurel), Monday, 11 July 2011 16:10 (fourteen years ago)
i liked rothfuss but on reflection they may not be very good
― remy bean, Monday, 11 July 2011 16:10 (fourteen years ago)
xp No, wait, that series is a bit trying but the GODSPEAKER trilogy is the truly sadistic material.
― manager expects you to work past 6PM but won't allow you to change into (Laurel), Monday, 11 July 2011 16:11 (fourteen years ago)
― remy bean, Monday, 11 July 2011 16:10 (2 minutes ago) Bookmark
yeah this is sort of how i felt about it
you can remotely gift people kindle books? i hadn't realised that + it is kind of exciting
how long do i have before i find myself inevitably reading george r.r. martin again
― thomp, Monday, 11 July 2011 16:13 (fourteen years ago)
She (Miller) is possibly the most annoying dialog writer I've ever encountered and the ending of The Reluctant Mage was a little pat given the hell the characters went through to get there, but they were a diverting enough read. I kind of wish she could reliably find that third dimension on her characters, though.
― DJP, Monday, 11 July 2011 16:14 (fourteen years ago)