When we drove a lot the weekend before last, we started listening to an audiobook, William Gibson's
Zero History. We got more than halfway, but Andy decided that he doesn't care enough about it and I finished it on my own, in 20 minute bursts. I was getting a bit tired of NPR and my seldom-updated music collection, so I've decided to switch to
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Recently read the Windup Girl http://www.goodreads.com/book/show/6597651-the-windup-girl, thought it was pretty good, it's kind of near-furure near-apocalyptic, so you might like it.
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The WIndup Girl sounds awesome, thank you!
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John Scalzi might be your cuppa. (Caveat: I've only read the Old Man's War trilogy, so that's what I'm basing my judgement on. Also, Fuzzy Nation, but if you want to read that, read the 1960s Little Fuzzy books by H. Beam Piper first, as it's an exercise in retelling the same story in a less 60s sort of a way.)
Charles Stross: In particular, Accelerando and Halting State. I also love his Laundry novels, but you likely would not: they are a modern setting, British bureaucracy meets Lovecraftian unspeakable horrors.
Not my cuppa but I think you might like: Vernor Vinge; Iain M. Banks.
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I will look up the rest of these, thank you! I actually just encountered Vinge and Banks at my source, so they'll be in my queue.
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