SF Poll

Feb 25, 2009 17:41

I hope this works. [Polls don't always like me.]

I've been thinking about my love of my fave genre and wondering what others prefer in science fiction.

Poll Science Fiction

books, sf

Leave a comment

Comments 30

beer_good_foamy February 26 2009, 00:02:09 UTC
Re: the type of authors - I'm fond of sf-tinged dystopias - y'know, Orwell, Huxley, that lot. I'm currently reading Yevgeny Zamyatin's We - the book that inspired Orwell to write 1984 - and loving it so far.

Not sure where Vonnegut fits in there, either.

Reply

ubiquirk February 26 2009, 00:12:56 UTC
Good catch on dystopias - I completely forgot that category, and it's one of my faves. 'We' is amazing and doesn't get the credit it deserves. I hope you enjoy.

And Vonnegut falls into the experimental 60s for me (when he got his start) - his near future, Earth-based fic starring little people was fairly anti-Golden Age.

Reply

xlivvielockex February 26 2009, 00:34:54 UTC
I'm with Foamy here (big surprise). I love the whole dystopian sci-fi future type of things. Books, short stories, movies.

I just ticked a lot of boxes because I'm the type that while I like dystopias the best, I will read just about anything someone recs me.

Reply

ubiquirk February 26 2009, 01:03:31 UTC
I only wish people did more with them these days. The last great one I can think of was the movie Brazil. (V was okay too, though I prefer the graphic novel.)

I also love the near-future messed-up Earth/society stories - Bladerunner, Children of Men, etc. Not dystopias because no one's pretending they're perfect, but still interesting.

Reply


athenamuze February 26 2009, 00:55:20 UTC
Where would King fit in on the author types? Anyhow, I ADORE Connie Willis and I'm thrilled you have her up there. YAY!

Reply

ubiquirk February 26 2009, 01:05:16 UTC
King is pretty much horror, which is its own subset of fantasy, so I don't know how he'd fit into sf.

Connie Willis is amazing - I did a non-spoilery review of her oeuvre a while back.

Reply

celisnebula February 27 2009, 02:36:28 UTC
I dunno... the Gunslinger series is more sf to me than horror... and despite the bloodly long wait between books, I turbo read them as soon as they came available.

Reply

ubiquirk February 28 2009, 15:21:00 UTC
Looking at his percentages, I think of him as horror writer who sometimes does other things. The Darktower series looks like he's mixed magical fantasy with western, and maybe some sf too. Thanks for the tip on them. Is he still rewriting them to make the early ones better - is that why there's a wait?

Reply


kiwifire February 26 2009, 02:06:36 UTC
I'm also a Kurt Vonnegut and Ray Bradbury short story lover, I just am not too sure where they fit in! I'm not too familiar with the "official" categories, since I only actually recognize the authors from the classic section, and LeGuin. >.>

Good stuff though! :D

Reply

ubiquirk February 26 2009, 22:58:20 UTC
For me Vonnegut falls into the experimental 60s (when he got his start) - his near future, Earth-based fic starring little people was fairly anti-Golden Age.

You're right Bradbury is wonderful. He's a classic, and one of the few I still really enjoy because he did a lot of soft sf before it was popular.

Yay for sf love!

Reply


ayerf February 26 2009, 14:30:01 UTC
The something else... let's see, there's Timothy Zahn, but I guess my focus is really on fantasy, what with Terry Pratchett and Tolkien. Quite a few of the 'children's books' I read also are quite strongly sf/fantasy, such as HP, Garth Nix, Philip Pullman to name a few.

One of these days I'll have to read some of those authors you've got listed there!

Reply

ubiquirk February 26 2009, 23:00:38 UTC
I don't read so much fantasy anymore, and what I do read doesn't stick with me. (Yes, including HP, I'll admit). But I do like Pullman. It's been ages since I read Pratchett - I should do so. Some humor right now wouldn't go amiss.

If you give me a general idea of the types of sf you might want to explore, I could maybe offer up some names.

Reply

ayerf February 27 2009, 19:19:12 UTC
One of these days I'll definitely want to read Philip K Dick - Ubik comes to mind somehow.

Most of what I've read so far has been Star Wars expanded universe spin off novel things. Something different to that, maybe?

Reply

ubiquirk February 28 2009, 15:40:11 UTC
'Ubik' is one of my PKD faves, but it's really wacky (fractured narrative, lots of wtf moments, etc). I think a good book to try him with at first is his early 'Time Out of Joint,' then 'The Man in the High Castle,' and then 'Ubik.'

For interesting New Space Opera, you've got Iain M. Banks in your own backyard! His Culture books are very good. They're all set in the same universe, yet aren't a series, per se. [Any books of his put out as Iain Banks are mainstream fiction - the M. means it's sf.]

Reply


dickgloucester February 26 2009, 15:48:40 UTC
Though I'm not reading much generally at the moment, I do like cyberpunk (have you tried Richard Morgan and Jeff Noon?), and the richness and wonderfulness of China Mieville (particularly Perdido Street Station and The Scar). There was also a duo of books, "Ilium" and "Olympos" by Dan Simmons, which blew me away for the richness of the story and characterisation.

For shorts, I pick up the occasional anthology, like the "Year's Best..."

While I love fantasy, I find less and les that is actually worth wasting my eyesight on. *sigh* Recommendations?

Reply

ubiquirk February 26 2009, 23:07:05 UTC
Yep, Morgan's great, which is why I included him in the cyberpunk category even though he's a bit newer. I really thought Altered Carbon was excellent.

I haven't read Noon - what's he like?

Mieville is really good too. Hard to place. That contemporary category I made acts as a great catch-all. (laughs)

Thanks for the tip - I need to look for more ways to read short stories than just waiting for a fave author to put out a collection.

For fantasy, almost everything disappoints me anymore (including, overall, HP). The only thing I can really recommend is George R. R. Martin's Song of Fire and Ice series. This ain't for kiddies, but if you like Morgan, then I doubt that you'll be put off because it's a little dark and violent. There's also a series by someone else that's about dragons in Napoleon's time that people say is good, but I haven't read it.

Reply

dickgloucester February 27 2009, 08:32:38 UTC
*headdesk* That's what comes of reading fast with hordes of children shouting at me.... Inattention to detail!

I've only read one Jeff Noon - "Pollen" - it was odd and compelling. All about people turing into plants, as far as I remember. I keep meaning to read more.

I love GRRM - waiting anxiously for the next.

Oh - do you know Tad Williams? He wrote a trilogy of four books (family joke), "Otherland" which brilliantly blends sci-fi and fantasy. I've just seen from Amazon that he's got something new out. *happy dancing*

Reply

ubiquirk February 28 2009, 15:25:45 UTC
Hee - I can only imagine the chaos that causes!

I'll look for the Noon book.

Great that you're already reading Fire and Ice! I've given up until it's done because I'm going to go back to the beginning and read straight through. I won't be able to keep it all straight any other way, it's so complex.

I have the first 2 Otherlands, and I really liked them (and much more than his straight fantasy). I need to try to pick up those last 2 - thanks for reminding me.

Have you ever read Ian McDonald? I usually find his stuff brill, and he's still putting things out.

Reply


Leave a comment

Up