[personal profile] drscott
At the request of one of last night's dinner guests (a school principal), I went over my SF library for less-known classics, plus neglected and newer authors she might not have encountered but which I can recommend as worthy in some way, by quality of writing, characterization, or interesting ideas. I tend to like harder SF, so this list is skewed in that direction, but if something's really good, genre doesn't matter. And of course I'm leaving out more than I'm listing, but time flies...


Post-1970 classics one might have missed:

Neal Stephenson, Snow Crash and The Diamond Age.

Orson Scott Card's Ender series.

Vernor Vinge.

Greg Bear, particularly Blood Music.

Lois McMaster Bujold's Miles Vorkosigan stories, which while inhabiting a space-operatic framework are really masterful works of characterization. Her fantasy efforts are similarly character-grounded.

Dan Simmons, for both the Hyperion series and Ilium.

China Mieville, notably Perdido Street Station.

Alastair Reynolds.

Scottish post-socialists: Iain Banks (Excession) and Ken MacLeod.

Wil McCarthy: Bloom, The Collapsium series.

Walter Jon Williams: Aristoi, Metropolitan, the Dread Empire's Fall series.


Less well-known or new authors with a lot of promise:

John C. Wright, The Golden Age and sequels.

Charles Stross, aka [livejournal.com profile] autopope.

Karin Lowachee for Warchild and sequels, which are interestingly energetic adolescent novels.

Karen Traviss, notably for City of Pearl and sequels.

Kristine Smith, aka [livejournal.com profile] kaygo, who -- gasp! -- has no Wikipedia entry, for Code of Conduct and sequels.

Elizabeth Bear, aka [livejournal.com profile] matociquala.

Tony Daniel, for Metaplanetary.

New authors

Date: 2006-05-26 10:51 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] dean-in-sf.livejournal.com
Richard K Morgan won the 2005 Philip K Dick award so he can hardly be called 'lesser known'. But he is a not to be missed new author. Check my archives for review of "Altered Carbon," and "Market Forces".

Susan R Matthews' "Jurisdiction" series is a wicked fusion of S&M and SF.

If a principal put either of these author's works in her school's library she would soon be looking for a job in a new field.

Dean, who still owns the copy of "The Ringworld Engineers" he purchased at the COOP only after considering, at the end of the term, whether he would fail 18.061 if he bought the book.

Re: New authors

Date: 2006-05-27 12:24 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] bikerbearmark.livejournal.com
Richard K. Morgan's noir stylings are outstanding - I devoured Altered Carbon and am midway through Market Forces now.

Re: New authors

Date: 2006-05-27 05:47 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] dr-scott.livejournal.com
Agreed, left Morgan off because I missed that bookshelf...

Profile

drscott

November 2013

S M T W T F S
     12
3456789
10111213141516
171819 20212223
24252627282930

Most Popular Tags

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags
Page generated Jan. 26th, 2026 11:54 pm
Powered by Dreamwidth Studios