SciFi and Fantasy Book Club discussion
note: This topic has been closed to new comments.
Recommendations and Lost Books
>
Recs for a physicist
date
newest »


edit: What I mean to say is that he seems to find everything interesting, and I can’t think of a topic he hasn’t read about.
edit2: Did I just accidentally delete Jemppu’s post?! I’m so sorry! I’m walking and typing, not the best idea apparently :/

But hits so close to home: may I say how much I relate to the description of our brother - reading the facts rather than the work itself. And finding them more captivating than the fiction.
I'd dare suggest something rooted on factual events. A retelling or an alternative take on historical episode (anything he could parse apart based on facts). Do you have any idea what era in history he'd find interesting (antique, Renaissance, late modern, industrial, WW2, spacerace...)?
Or a take on future society.
Alas, I have not read nearly enough fiction to recommend any specific books from personal experience, but quickly skimming through lists for "alternative history" and "social scifi" might yield to something.
Did just so quickly, and I feel need to point out this 'tale' from mr. Stephen Fry - with a physicist - as quite on the nose: Making History. But nothing more than that: I suspect it might be quite tedious with it's apparently 'storybook' form of telling.
However! This stood out as something potentially interesting: What if?. Or something in that vein, if not quite that military oriented.

No, sorry! I deleted that myself to form it a bit better ^^'
Yeah, I was feeling bit sorry for you for that "What If?" rec - seemed rather dull read from fictional tales perspective :D
What about a Michael Crichton like Jurassic Park or The Andromeda Strain?
Or what about a famous book on writing, which is supposed to be fun to read and informative, like On Writing: A Memoir of the Craft?
Otherwise, I think you're looking at Asimov or Sagan for scifi.
Or what about a famous book on writing, which is supposed to be fun to read and informative, like On Writing: A Memoir of the Craft?
Otherwise, I think you're looking at Asimov or Sagan for scifi.

He does watch sci-fi with me though. All my kids come to Star Wars with me if we happen to be able to be in the same place. And he even watches Star Trek with me on occasion.
My boys also enjoyed Ready Player One. The book not the movie. Hubby and the boys all hated the movie.

Oh god no. Even as a layperson I can point to dozens of scientific howlers in every Crichton book.

I almost convinced him to read Ninefox Gambit, but then I made the mistake of telling him what mumbo jumbo theories some people had about how things work in that universe, and his expression was like "What is this disgusting filth you're peddling?!" In fact this is how we talk about scifi books with him, I tell him about a book I've read, and what science-y bits it has, and then he has a great time telling me how that isn't at all possible. Maybe this should be my gift to him? Instead of trying to make him read books, I could read more hard scifi, and then tell him about them? :D Of course that means I'd have to listen to the lectures.
He does watch GoT, but I can't imagine him reading straight-up fantasy. He never even read Harry Potter, no matter how much me and my other brother kept nagging him about it. He did go see the movies with us, but I don't think he even read the first HP.
I do kind of like the idea of a classic dystopia. There's less science to pick apart, it's not meant to be scientifically accurate. And at least he would have fun telling everyone how ridiculous it was!
Trike wrote: "Allison wrote: "What about a Michael Crichton like Jurassic Park or The Andromeda Strain?"
Oh god no. Even as a layperson I can point to dozens of scientific howlers in..."
TBH I only read the one and many years ago, but I remember it having enough fun stuff that was close-ish that science types at least had fun picking it apart, and a narrative structure that's easy to digest, while still being so implausible that it didn't sound like it was trying to suggest that this was the way the future would work.
A classic dystopia, Anna? Like 1984? Or classic in the sense of "contains all the elements one anticipates in a dystopic novel?"
Oh god no. Even as a layperson I can point to dozens of scientific howlers in..."
TBH I only read the one and many years ago, but I remember it having enough fun stuff that was close-ish that science types at least had fun picking it apart, and a narrative structure that's easy to digest, while still being so implausible that it didn't sound like it was trying to suggest that this was the way the future would work.
A classic dystopia, Anna? Like 1984? Or classic in the sense of "contains all the elements one anticipates in a dystopic novel?"

Encounter with Tiber? it's written by Buzz Aldrin, an engineer and former American astronaut. After graduating from Montclair High School in 1946, Aldrin turned down a full scholarship offer from MIT, and went to the US Military Academy at West Point, New York. Buzz Aldrin graduated third in his class at West Point in 1951, with a Bachelor of Science degree in mechanical engineering.

I have the perfect book for him. Hopefully he hasn’t read it. Dragon's Egg by Robert L. Forward. It’s about life on a neutron star. Forward was a physicist and he has appendages explaining the science behind the book.
If he’s read that, try Tau Zero by Poul Anderson. It’s a bit dated now, but still physics-oriented. The story collection Matter's End by physicist/astronomer Gregory Benford has some mind-stretchers. See Benford’s other books, too.
I’d also try books written by actual scientists, such as Geoffrey A. Landis, David Brin, Catherine Asaro, Stephen Baxter, Vernor Vinge and Mike Brotherton.


I would steer clear of anything related to Physics, naturally. My brother, the one with the PhD in Physics, is really easy going with fiction, but he does not agree with everything Stephen Hawkins wrote (anyone who thinks that physicists are all in agreement with everything he wrote is probably not a physicist).
But my brother enjoys scifi, like the unbelievable stuff in Star Trek (beam me, up, Scotty and warp speeds, etc), so his choices are no help.


But the next one by the same author is just as good, and that would be Artemis
More heavy science, this time in the context of a settlement on the Moon.


Who is this magical creature?! I'm going to have to read something by her *immediately* ! I don't know if she is the answer to this particular question, but she is for sure going on my TBR.

The Three-Body Problem
A good story with some plausible non-Earth physics in it
Blindsight
I liked this because it was a bunch of biology based sci-fi which I don't see often, it might intrigue him because he can't poke holes as easily?
Revelation Space
Writen by a physicist whose stated goal is to be as true to known physics as possible.



If I can't find the perfect scifi, then it'll have to be a non-fiction about crows or ravens, he's fascinated by smart birds.


He's notoriously hard to get gifts for, it's not just books. But you're right, I know how annoying it is if someone is trying to force their favorite thing on you.



I'm SO tempted! But I really have tried to make him read Ninefox, and he hasn't, so I guess I'm out of luck :(

Maybe these will work with your brother? It's hard to say. Physicists come in different strengths. I, personally, am willing to suspend belief in the interests of telling a good story as long as the transgressions aren't too egregious (and I can "recommend" some books that fail here too). Some really see everything through that critical physicist lens.


I believe that the authors got to tour NASA as a result of it and the science bits did have some checking done by an astrophysicist. https://tsanasreads.blogspot.com/2015...


It's definitely much, much more than love notes. Yes, there are teens, and yes there is some romance, but it's not the whole story, and not even nearly the whole story.
The format of the books is unusual, (three part series) and takes the form of offical emails, personal emails, observations from 'analysts' and military and corporate info.
Illuminae is definitely not your typical YA lovey dovey pap. Maybe read a few reviews and have a think. I know quite a few adults, who read all kinds of stuff, love this series.

I have to add that I'm very grateful for all the wonderful recs from everyone, and I don't mean to rudely dismiss them! I'm channeling my brother, trying to imagine how he would react if I gave him a certain book. I miss the days when I just paid his yearly WOW subscription!


They were seriously the best audiobooks I've ever listened to. It really surprised me, actually, but the unusual format works amazingly well, and they've taken the time to use multiple voices, and to dramatise them. The Aiden voice was absolutely perfect.

But the next one by the same author i..."
Many of my reading friends who liked The Martian didn't like Artemis, and I have chosen not to read it. What do you like about it?

The Martian is great on audio--but it went slower than I wanted to read it. But, if he won't read a book when he's seen the movie, skip that.
Wil Wheaton is a great audiobook reader if you can find one you think he'll like that Wheaton has narrated.
This topic has been frozen by the moderator. No new comments can be posted.
Books mentioned in this topic
Illuminae (other topics)House of Suns (other topics)
The Prefect (other topics)
Revelation Space (other topics)
Limit (other topics)
More...
Authors mentioned in this topic
Catherine Asaro (other topics)Mike Brotherton (other topics)
Vernor Vinge (other topics)
Gregory Benford (other topics)
Geoffrey A. Landis (other topics)
More...
Standalones would be preferred, and not super long ones. I'm trying to get him to actually read it with me! He does watch a lot of scifi shows/movies, so I'd rather find something that hasn't been adapted. So it'll likely have to be hard scifi, but still entertaining. And obviously the science should be fairly accurate.
He does enjoy fantasy too, he was a walking LOTR encyclopedia as a kid, probably still is. I don't think he's ever read the books though, just everything *about* them. So here's the problem, he reads a lot, but he will always default to spending hours reading facts about a work of fiction, instead of actually reading the book.
Help!