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
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
kaygo, who -- gasp! -- has no Wikipedia entry, for Code of Conduct and sequels.
Elizabeth Bear, aka
matociquala.
Tony Daniel, for Metaplanetary.
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
Karin Lowachee for Warchild and sequels, which are interestingly energetic adolescent novels.
Karen Traviss, notably for City of Pearl and sequels.
Kristine Smith, aka
Elizabeth Bear, aka
Tony Daniel, for Metaplanetary.
no subject
Date: 2006-05-26 08:59 pm (UTC)I *really* liked Orson Scott Card's work (the Ender series, the Alvin Maker series and other stuff he wrote) but then I encountered some characters in his books that were gay, but behaved in very non-empowered ways. I also read some of his views on homosexuality and...well, READ FOR YOURSELF. Scary, no?
no subject
Date: 2006-05-26 08:59 pm (UTC)See, a good old fashioned genre reader... I did not know this about you.
(glee)
Tried Syne Mitchell? From your descriptions I bet you'd at least be interested in a once through of her stuff.
no subject
Date: 2006-05-26 09:00 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-05-26 09:02 pm (UTC)Anyway, in a VERY rare move, his books were removed from my home.
no subject
Date: 2006-05-26 09:02 pm (UTC)I wrote a similar reveiw a few years ago. It is a little dated (Bujold had only written "the spirit ring" at the point I wrote this for instance. Her current fantasy work is amazing.)
http://www.speakeasy.org/~tdjohnsn/about/about_authors.html
I think you would really like Stephen Brust and John Barnes.
no subject
Date: 2006-05-26 09:03 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-05-26 09:07 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-05-26 09:15 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-05-26 09:18 pm (UTC)The disconnect between him and his writing is a hard one. I generally try to disassociate the artist from the art, as much as possible. But when that art is used to fund or fuel or provide the kind of notoriety to further a personal agenda that, as an average unknown, they normally wouldn't have the ability to further in quite the same way? I get crankyish.
Admittedly I do believe a portion of any good artform - literature or visual or whatever - can be to make statements of a personal or philosophical nature. Fair enough.
I even recognize that the "major" problem here is my own dislike of his message. Otherwise he's done nothing at all wrong, just puts out a message I don't agree with. Big whoop.
Though I will note it darkly amuses me that Ender's Game can be seen as a discussion of "difference shouldn't equate to hate" and this book granted him the fame to get a column, and the ability to write in that column whatever he pleases, including a riff on gay people wanting the right to marry just like everyone else.
no subject
Date: 2006-05-26 09:20 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-05-26 10:10 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-05-26 10:47 pm (UTC)I enjoyed the whole idea of The Culture.
New authors
Date: 2006-05-26 10:51 pm (UTC)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.
no subject
Date: 2006-05-27 12:08 am (UTC)Owns a sling,
has a job,
AND can read!
You keep raising the bar. I am going to come over and shove some cheetos down your throat and make you watch my boxed set of Golden Girls.
Re: New authors
Date: 2006-05-27 12:24 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-05-27 03:03 am (UTC)Yes, he's right. I did have a choice. I did marry a woman in the 70s, and I could have procreated to ensure that my DNA stream was passed on. But we divorced after a year, because I was gay. We could have lived the next 50 years in misery, but we didn't. And I didn't carry on my own person DNA stream.
Ah, well. Guess I won't pick up any more OSC novels...
no subject
Date: 2006-05-27 05:46 am (UTC)Re: New authors
Date: 2006-05-27 05:47 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-05-27 05:48 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-05-27 05:34 pm (UTC)http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B000F5WN3C/qid=1148751209/sr=11-1/ref=sr_11_1/002-5087122-6310402?n=5174
after perusing the artwork check out the song titles
no subject
Date: 2006-05-28 02:48 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-05-28 06:03 am (UTC)Your tastes are very much in line with mine. I'd go a little further and expand on a few specific works that I appreciate most:
Vernor Vinge
- Across Realtime
- A Fire Upon the Deep
- A Deepness in the Sky
Charles Stross
- Singularity Sky
- The Family Trade
And how about Spider Robinson? He can be trite and/or cloying sometimes, but when he's good, he's very very good.
no subject
Date: 2006-05-30 08:53 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-05-30 04:38 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-05-31 11:00 pm (UTC)Thanks for the list -- it'll be very useful.