The Evolution of Science Fiction discussion
General Science Fiction
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What are you reading?


Exactly! Bradbury's afterword in the audio edition I last listened to was scary. He said that he received letters in the same week that said it promoted or denigrated the same minority. He said loud, offended minorities were the real fireman. He found over 75 edits in one of the editions.

http://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/19141
Here's the Cracked.com article.
http://www.cracked.com/article_19949_...

Thanks Jim. I liked the article and i've downloaded this one, sounds like a fun read.

I've started reading this now and in terms of a sequel to War of the World it's not really comparable. The article is quite right about all the science things, i'm quite enjoying the disintegrators, turn a switch and whatever you point it at just disappears. It's certainly not a great literary work but definitely a fun read so far.

Just started an audiobook of Station Eleven. A deadly pandemic leads to the end of civilization-as-we-know it, kind of like The Stand or Earth Abides, I guess.

Sounds like a good choice. I like PKD but I don't think i've read any of his short stories. In fact it's probably something I should read. His book always seem complicated with multiple arcs, it's difficult to imagine his short stories.

How are you finding Station Eleven? I've just bought it as one of my friends recommended it. Another of my friends has since said it's only Ok. One is a big sci-fi fan and the other not so I wonder if that's the difference.

About halfway in. It's not bad. So many genre novels are quirky in style, but Station Eleven seems to be written in the style of current best sellers. It is the author's fourth novel but first science fiction, I think. It's well written, but so far, not very fast moving. Aside from a flu epidemic that wipes out nearly the whole population of the earth practically overnight, it's not sciency. Lots of segments before and after the collapse.

Sounds like a good choice. I like PKD but I don't think i've read any of his..."
I actually have read some of his most celebrated novellas. For example Minority Report, We can remember it for youwholesale and others. I think they work out really well, and Dick manages to master the short story narrative tool. I think this particular tool suits really well to science-fiction...
I think you should give it a try :)

You're probably right but i've often been disappointed with short stories collections so I tend to avoid them. Maybe I will try to read the book containing minority report though as I enjoyed the ideas in the film - assuming it has some resemblance to the book!


The Year of the Flood was probably the best of the Oryx and Crake trilogy. She made her name with The Handmaid's Tale and I don't know that she's done that well since.
My spouse loved The Vampire Diaries - she loves that genre - not my cup o' tea.

That's disappointing if The Year of the Flood is the best. I am going to finish the series though as my local library has the third.
I'm beginning to think I should not read vampire books as both Twilight and The Vampire Diaries have been terrible. I only read it as i've been watching the TV series The Originals and I heard this was a spin off. The TV series is much more entertaining although completely over the top.



Short stories or novellas is really good and Stefan Rudnicky narrates.


https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...
That's a bit of a stretch, but I do think Brunner is an overlooked SF talent. I think I've read 3 of his books now, the other 2 being The Shockwave Rider & The Whole Man. I haven't read the latter in a long time, but gave the former a 4 star review back in 2008. It's here:
https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...

Moving on!

I'm reading a book my friend just lent me, The Watchmaker of Filigree Street, it's quite an unusual book I guess it could be considered as steampunk.



https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...

https://www.goodreads.c..."
Ubik was the very first Kindle book I read. I am a bit of a PKD fan, but this one left me wondering why it's such a favorite.

I pretty much agree with you regards to Howl's Moving Castle. It started off well and I was really enjoying it and then it kind of lost it's way a bit and I lost some of my interest. Then it ended as I imagined it would.
I'm not sure what it was in the middle that put me off, whether just to many plot lines or whether Sophie just started to annoy me. Anyway I have to admit I probably preferred the film. It seems it's the first in a trilogy but can't imagine i'm going to read the other two any time soon.



I think I know what you mean about Neal Stephenson, although I can't say I feel the same about Mr Dick (I quite like his stories). I haven't read Snow Crash yet, but I did read Seveneves recently. I enjoyed the first half of it much better than the second (it's one of those novels that really should have been two novels), but I felt Stephenson's in-depth science factualism was too much of a distraction - there were many parts in which I wanted him to just get on with the story. Sometimes, I think some sci-fi authors forget they're writing fiction, not a thesis.


I really liked the first book I ever read by him which was Callahan's Crosstime Saloon. The setting was great since I was born near & spent a fair amount of time around 25a in Suffolk county. There were a lot of little bars that could have fit the basic description & there is a Callahan Street between Centerport & Northport, IIRC. It always made me feel like I might just be able to stop by one night.
Lynne wrote: "I just finished Neil Gaiman's American Gods - omg what a good book and definitely re-readable! ..."
I suggest you try the sequel Anansi Boys, then. It is shorter and funnier.
I suggest you try the sequel Anansi Boys, then. It is shorter and funnier.

https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...
Well worth reading, especially as an introduction to this author.

Stick with it mate ... The series gets better and better, and I thoroughly enjoyed it.
I have just started reading Dreamsnake by Vonda N. McIntyre.

https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...

https://www.tor.com/2020/02/20/announ...

I never heard about the book but the Cracked.com article was great !!

I hope you stuck with Norstrilia. Cordwainer Smith is one of my favorite authors. I would highly recommend his short story collection The Rediscovery of Man.


Short stories or novellas is really good and Stefan Rudnicky narrates."
This is a great selection of short stories by Brown from the Late 1940's and early 1950's and present his wonderfully unique, sometimes macabre and often humorous short stories.
Books mentioned in this topic
The Twilight Man: Rod Serling and the Birth of Television (other topics)The Twilight Man: Rod Serling and the Birth of Television (other topics)
Honeymoon in Hell (other topics)
Norstrilia (other topics)
Outcasts of Order (other topics)
More...
Authors mentioned in this topic
Charles Beaumont (other topics)Fredric Brown (other topics)
Cordwainer Smith (other topics)
L.E. Modesitt Jr. (other topics)
Vonda N. McIntyre (other topics)
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https://www.goodreads.com/shelf/show/...
with "Popular Banned Books Shelf"
https://www.goodreads.com/shelf/show/...
Seems to me many of the very best are to be found on both.
Many, like Huck Finn are on required reading lists & yet is often banned in other areas because of "Nigger Jim". The word 'nigger' is used often in the text & somehow people think a word is bad when taken in historical context. Personally, I think it's a good way of teaching that context. I've never met anyone who learned by remaining ignorant. To Kill a Mockingbird is another that winds up on both lists & yet was there ever a better cry for racial equality?
How Fahrenheit 451 even manages to make a banned book list is beyond me & I don't really understand what is controversial about the rest. The Outsiders as well as That Was Then, This is Now were both excellent books & did nothing to glorify gangs as so many seem to think. I'll bet they just read the word on the back cover & freaked out. Seems to me that's how most of the banned books wind up on the lists such as Harry Potter for having 'witches'.
I kind of wish they'd ban some of the books that seem mandatory on the reading lists, though. The Catcher in the Rye wasn't bad for a teen, but if there's anything that adds less to the main story than the third of Moby Dick dealing with cutting up that whale, I can't think of it off hand. Unfortunately, his 'classic' keeps cropping up on school reading lists. It's one of the few stories that's best in an abridged edition, IMO.