I've been reading Ilium by Dan Simmons and good lord it's some of the best science fiction I've ever read. Is everything by Simmons this good?.
My brother loves his stuff. He wrote a few science fiction books, a few really gritty noir books, and has apparently written some other stuff.
My only problem with Simmons is that I never really like his sequels. Illium is awesome, and Hyperion is wonderful, but then I didn't like either Olympos or Fall of Hyperion. It just feels like his stories lose their tightness after the first book.
Just started on "Guns, Germs and Steel". I've been meaning to read this for years. Best part is, it's required reading for the class I'm doing on plant breeding, so it counts as homework. 8-)
It's pretty interesting stuff, the way it all comes together
I loved them. The third was more of a pleasant buzz than a rip-roaring drunk like the other three, but still enjoyable. I can't really get people not liking the second one. He delivers on the first one's cliffhanger ending and retroactively weaves a new (and compelling) character back into the first one. No small feat given how dense and intricate it is.
Other than the Hyperion books, I've read The Terror by Simmons. It was pretty damn fantastic. I've got Carrion Comfort queued up next and hopes are running high.
My brother got me three pulp sci fi novels from the 60s, 70s, and 80s, like, the ones that were $1 a piece. They were all real fast reads, one better than the other two by a long shot, but now I'm on a weird old school sci fi kick with no real knowledge of where to go next.
I've already read Bester, and I really like the whole 50s view of the future style novels.
Not quite pulp but Brave New World counts as old school sci-fi in my book and doubles as one of my favorite novels, you could check that out if you haven't.
Not quite pulp but Brave New World counts as old school sci-fi in my book and doubles as one of my favorite novels, you could check that out if you haven't.
Oh, I've read it all right. It was real good! Imma head to the library in a titch, see if they have any Heinlein
Brave New World is an absolute must-read for everyone, but I can't honestly say I'll ever want to read it again. But I said the same thing about 1984 a decade ago and that's been whispering at me for a re-read for a while now.
AntimatterDevo Was RightGates of SteelRegistered Userregular
edited February 2010
so, I was in my library and saw a book called "Little Brother". The side had a generic picture of teens in action poses in front of an X filled with zeros and ones. I thought, "Oh, cute. An Orwellian pun, hahaha." I removed it from the shelf to see the description on the back of the book, and I froze when I saw the cover. Neil Gaiman, of all people, said it was the book he'd recommend over any other book the year it was published, 2008. I then turned it over, stunned, and instead of a short synopsis I saw a list of quotes from various people talking about how good it was, including another Gaiman quote, and a quote from Brian K Vaughan.
Has anyone else read it, I'm tempted to read it
Antimatter on
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Quoththe RavenMiami, FL FOR REALRegistered Userregular
edited February 2010
one time i read a book that my friend said she loved as a kid and it was pretty terrible
and then i noticed that the recommendation on the cover was by terry goodkind
so, I was in my library and saw a book called "Little Brother". The side had a generic picture of teens in action poses in front of an X filled with zeros and ones. I thought, "Oh, cute. An Orwellian pun, hahaha." I removed it from the shelf to see the description on the back of the book, and I froze when I saw the cover. Neil Gaiman, of all people, said it was the book he'd recommend over any other book the year it was published, 2008. I then turned it over, stunned, and instead of a short synopsis I saw a list of quotes from various people talking about how good it was, including another Gaiman quote, and a quote from Brian K Vaughan.
Has anyone else read it, I'm tempted to read it
This is one of the 5 most recommended/loved teen books of that year. I mean people were raving about it like they were about The Hunger Games. Read it, its vision of the near future is mildly uncanny.
Peen on
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Quoththe RavenMiami, FL FOR REALRegistered Userregular
edited February 2010
my local elementary school gifted class reads A Wrinkle In Time
so, I was in my library and saw a book called "Little Brother". The side had a generic picture of teens in action poses in front of an X filled with zeros and ones. I thought, "Oh, cute. An Orwellian pun, hahaha." I removed it from the shelf to see the description on the back of the book, and I froze when I saw the cover. Neil Gaiman, of all people, said it was the book he'd recommend over any other book the year it was published, 2008. I then turned it over, stunned, and instead of a short synopsis I saw a list of quotes from various people talking about how good it was, including another Gaiman quote, and a quote from Brian K Vaughan.
Has anyone else read it, I'm tempted to read it
This is one of the 5 most recommended/loved teen books of that year. I mean people were raving about it like they were about The Hunger Games. Read it, its vision of the near future is mildly uncanny.
A Wrinkle In Time was the best one overall, but the one that takes place before the Great Flood was probably my favorite as a kid. Many Waters is the title according to wikipedia. Angels walking the earth and such and generally being just as corrupt as the people they consorted with.
Little Brother is great. I read it, despite being "too old," and loved it -- Cory Doctorow is my hero & he's doing the right thing. The book even teaches you internet security 101.
I'll argue Heinlein was good before he got old. I like him when he's talking about spaceships and rugged individualism.
I don't like him much when he talks about sex. It's icky, the way the whole early sixties was icky, the way Brigitte Bardot movies were icky -- the "sexual revolution" as a smorgasbord of creamy thighflesh, set to a Herb Alpert soundtrack. I say "Feh," but then again straight girls don't get much out of an assortment of delightfully available redheads, blondes, and brunettes.
I should read them again though, I haven't since I was like 10 or 11.
also t Cilla, aside from one storyline that I did not like the direction it took, I think Olympos is a perfect followup to Ilium. Fall of Hyperion is kind of a different thing, Hyperion is so good on so many levels that it's pretty much impossible to really follow up on. I mean as far as resolution to the story goes, Fall of Hyperion works just fine in that regard (and I like the two Endymion books as well). But really nothing can match what Simmons achieves in Hyperion, it is a fucking masterpiece of narrative and writing and I say that with no hyperbole intended.
It's hard to explain if you have not read it, but yeah don't go into Fall of Hyperion expecting Hyperion redux, that's the key.
I fucking loved The Mad Scientists' Club books when I was a kid. god bless whoever put those books on my third grade classroom shelf about thirty years before I came along and read them
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My brother loves his stuff. He wrote a few science fiction books, a few really gritty noir books, and has apparently written some other stuff.
My only problem with Simmons is that I never really like his sequels. Illium is awesome, and Hyperion is wonderful, but then I didn't like either Olympos or Fall of Hyperion. It just feels like his stories lose their tightness after the first book.
But other people really like all his stuff.
my Dan Simmons radar went off and I got here as fast as I could.
It's pretty interesting stuff, the way it all comes together
Other than the Hyperion books, I've read The Terror by Simmons. It was pretty damn fantastic. I've got Carrion Comfort queued up next and hopes are running high.
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Getting started with BATTLETECH: Part 1 / Part 2
I've already read Bester, and I really like the whole 50s view of the future style novels.
his chief weapon is rampant sexual deviancy
and misogyny
his chief weapons
no wait let's start again
I read the two Dirk Gentley books the past few days
God bless you, Douglas Adams
man, i am going to see about testing out of english tomorrow!
i'm pretty fucking stoked.
I accidentally read The Long Dark Tea-Time of the Soul before Dirk Gentley's Holistic Detective Agency and it didn't end up making a difference
He is one of my favorite PI's
for the course i'm trying to test out of it says i gotta solve a specific problem in literary analysis.
i've done far better on all my in-class essays than i have done on any of my take-home ones, so i suspect that this will play to my strengths better.
:^:
"well his name isn't philip k pussy"
Oh, I've read it all right. It was real good! Imma head to the library in a titch, see if they have any Heinlein
your husband is a badass
That may be the best possible response that he could have given. Bravo sir.
If you have to read it in class you might stab your fellow classmates.
he make the funny
Has anyone else read it, I'm tempted to read it
and then i noticed that the recommendation on the cover was by terry goodkind
This is one of the 5 most recommended/loved teen books of that year. I mean people were raving about it like they were about The Hunger Games. Read it, its vision of the near future is mildly uncanny.
4th grade i believe
so someone still thinks it's pretty swell
OK then, right after I finish Cosmos
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Little Brother is great. I read it, despite being "too old," and loved it -- Cory Doctorow is my hero & he's doing the right thing. The book even teaches you internet security 101.
I'll argue Heinlein was good before he got old. I like him when he's talking about spaceships and rugged individualism.
I don't like him much when he talks about sex. It's icky, the way the whole early sixties was icky, the way Brigitte Bardot movies were icky -- the "sexual revolution" as a smorgasbord of creamy thighflesh, set to a Herb Alpert soundtrack. I say "Feh," but then again straight girls don't get much out of an assortment of delightfully available redheads, blondes, and brunettes.
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also t Cilla, aside from one storyline that I did not like the direction it took, I think Olympos is a perfect followup to Ilium. Fall of Hyperion is kind of a different thing, Hyperion is so good on so many levels that it's pretty much impossible to really follow up on. I mean as far as resolution to the story goes, Fall of Hyperion works just fine in that regard (and I like the two Endymion books as well). But really nothing can match what Simmons achieves in Hyperion, it is a fucking masterpiece of narrative and writing and I say that with no hyperbole intended.
It's hard to explain if you have not read it, but yeah don't go into Fall of Hyperion expecting Hyperion redux, that's the key.
allegory might not be the word i want but i dont care man i am blazin with the white album bros