I have to read hitch hiker's guide within the next month or so, anyone have opinions on it?
Printable View
I have to read hitch hiker's guide within the next month or so, anyone have opinions on it?
I read an interesting book called "The Dark Beyond the Stars" and I recommend it. A huge space craft left Earth to look for life on other planets and to look for other life-sustaining planets.
The Captain of the ship is also "immortal" and goes a bit crazy, not wanting to abandon his mission, but rather wants to take the ship through "the dark" from one spiral of the Milky Way to the next, but the rest of the crew isn't so sure.Quote:
Originally Posted by Amazon.com
I wonder where my copy went.
You really can't go wrong with Robert A. Heinlein and Orson Scott Card. Kurt Vonnegut and Douglas Adams (HHGttG is one of my favorite trilogies of all time, and Douglas Adams is my second favorite author) for respectively funnier yet not at all lighter reading, L. Ron Hubbard for some very original concepts and great writing, Timothy Zahn for some excellent writing with more original ideas (The Icarus Hunt is superb). Alan Dean Foster is another favorite of mine, and Gordon R. Dickson (namely Wolf And Iron) is damn good as well. Piers Anthony is awesome, and Poul Anderson and Dave Wolverton have their moments.
I'm sure I can think of a few others, given time. I read more fantasy than hard sci-fi these days.
HGTG series
Citizen of the Galaxy - Heinlein
And the guy that wrote Dune is pretty good too
And MOS, HGTG is not a trilogy. There's the original, Restaurant at the end of the universe: Life, the Universe and Everything; So long and thanks for the all the fish and Mostly Harmless. AND he meant to do a 6th book called the salmon of doubt where all the characters would meet back together in heaven
=biggest douglas adams fan ever
I would call it a saga.
Don't condescend me, I'll make you eat your parents.
What I meant by that, is that while it is technically a quintology, any true Douglas Adams fan would know that he always referred to HHGttG as a trilogy. It's an inside joke, I guess. Amongst us real Douglas Adams fans. :cheeky:
Going to look into those of your´s I do not yet know!
Sure - I know Asimov and Heinlein and they are masters of course, but very widely known, too.
And what would the world be without the "Hitchhiker´s Guide"..??
Thanks!
And the authors I put in fat lettering are among my favourites, too!
For John Scalzi - definitively don´t miss out on "The Android´s Dream" and I really like the "young-adult-fiction" book belonging into Old Man´s War, too - "Zoe´s Tale".
For Gibson I esp. like "Virtual Light" but basically read and liked almost all of them.
Neal Stevenson, though - he is my all time hero - the one who wrote Snow Crash.
And "Anathem" is my all time favourite novel: Wikipedia Anathem
But getting quite some heavy, heavy competition with what I read at the moment after Sageous recommendation - "The Winter Horse" by Mark Helprin - this is such wonderful stuff - hard to find words there - I am really deeply moved. I would call it fantastic fiction after being not far in, and it has got to do with dreaming - also lucid dreaming.
I asked him for a tip, because he also deems Anathem a great book..
For something less than a 1000 pages of Stephenson´s and a great sci-fi novel, too: "The Diamond Age".
I read every single book of his and am yet to be disappointed.. while the latest stuff - Reamde and The Mongoliad are maybe the ones I like least..
Check out the Baroque Cycle, if you are interested in not only science fiction.
I agree with shadowofwind - Neal Asher and Aleister Reynolds are a bit dark and violent but genial both.
I have a recommendation of his as well to yet try out: Vandana Singh.
And one to revisit after a tip of dutchraptor´s - Peter F. Hamilton for his Commonwealth Saga and the Void trilogy.
Small list of other science fiction authors I really, really like:
Greg Egan I read Quarantine, Diaspora, short story collections "Axiomatic" and "Luminous" and more
Ian M. Banks - for example The Algebraist, but all of the Culture Series, and actually all others - I think, I read them all, and I´m afraid the Scott is dead now...He did write "normal" fiction as well, as Ian Banks.
Lois McMaster Bujold and her Vorkosigan Saga, read it all, and can´t wait for a new book of hers - very unique and funny
Paolo Bacigalupi - he wrote very good short stories, didn´t read a novel of his, though
Kim Stanley Robinson - Mars Trilogy - this is something with "real" scientists - in the sense, that they and other´s personalities and the story are compellingly realistic and seeming possible.
Charles Stross - Singularity Sky and Iron Sunrise, Accelerando
David Marusek - really great collection of shorts: "Getting to Know You" and also "Counting Heads" and "Mind Over Ship"
Vernor Vinge - bit easier to digest than some of the above - I did enjoy "A Deepness In The Sky" and "Fire Upon The Deep of his, too.