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SciFi books with a medieval type setting?
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Michael
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Apr 07, 2023 12:43PM

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Sounds good, reminds me of Pastwatch.

Perhaps slightly too early (the setting could be considered to be very late antiquity rather than early medieval), and originally published as fantasy, is L. Sprague de Camp's "Lest Darkness Fall," recently available with continuations by other hands as Lest Darkness Fall & Related Stories.
It was published in the magazine "Unknown" in 1939, and, expanded, in book format in 1941, a then-rare distinction for science fiction or fantasy from the genre magazines.
An involuntary time traveler trying to advance technology in Gothic Italy is given a realistic treatment, so it is much harder than Mark Twain postulated -- for humorous and satirical purposes -- in A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur's Court.
The book originally opened with a scene in Rome under Benito Mussolini, but from the 1980s on period-specific references (such as "Benny the Moose") were omitted from reprintings as too likely to be unintelligible to later generations of readers. I think this lost a valuable nuance, since the "Darkness" in the title could reference modern times as well as the "Dark Ages."
De Camp based it heavily on period sources,* mainly Procopius (see Wikipedia), but when it first appeared many readers would have been more likely to know the period from Robert Graves' recent Count Belisarius (1938). Which, although not science fiction in the least, is worth reading.
*De Camp later reported that a scholar had spotted a grammatical error in the sentence he gave in Gothic, to provide "local color" while most of the dialogue is theoretically in Latin.
He also missed that the Ostrogoths in Italy were in fact known to deploy infantry, but the system quickly fell apart after the death of Theodoric the Great. But in this he seems to have been mislead by standard military histories, as well as the absence of references to it by Procopius.)

Thank you. Lord Valentine's Castle is one of my favorite books and Constantinople is a period of history I actually know about.


Two, umm, protagonists on a medieval court (spoiler: they are kind of aliens) :-) :
Inversions

Two, umm, protagonists on a medieval court (spoiler: they are kind of aliens) :-) :
Inversions.."
Sorry, I didn't see this was already nominated. I second this wholeheartedly. At the same time as medieval and as Culture as the get.

Not to mention a bodyguard, an assassin, a doctor, evolving worldviews, etc etc. Very rich, very imaginative, very medieval, and at the same time very Culture.

..."
I actually want to re-read this now. It's been a while. And I miss Banks...

The Coldfire Trilogy? Really good books.
Silvana wrote: "Timeline?"
Timeline is definitely a sci-fi story in a medieval setting. Unfortunately, Michael Crichton's story had a lot of nonsense and illogical twists to it that diminished the value of the base concept in his scenario. It was a fair book in my opinion, but not a great book.
Timeline is definitely a sci-fi story in a medieval setting. Unfortunately, Michael Crichton's story had a lot of nonsense and illogical twists to it that diminished the value of the base concept in his scenario. It was a fair book in my opinion, but not a great book.

I loved Timeline! It read like (loosely based) historical fiction with intermittent sci fi scenes- Fun, easy read.

I loved Michael Crichton's The Andromeda Strain, Sphere a bit less so, but it was still a passable SciFi-ish adventure. But I stopped reading him after State of Fear - accelerated natural disasters are "manufactured" by "eco-terrorists" ?!? Really ?!? The book served its purpose well - to fuel the manufactured "controversy" over anthropogenic global warming.
Many "ecocalypse" novels are over-the-top and I don't like that, either (Kim Stanley Robinson is an example of good "climate fiction"), but this is simply mercenary, especially with its pretense of being based on science.
Whether Crichton is merely an idiot or, more likely, easy to buy and without conscience, I don't care. Perhaps this was not even commissioned, but Crichton simply smelled a big population of "skeptic" audience - again, i don't care.
Not that "eco-warriors" are blameless - for example, Greenpeace's well financed and extremely well executed FUD campaign against nuclear energy (playing on emotional connection to nuclear weapons) that goes hand in hand, and is probably financed by, similar campaign by fossil fuel lobby going on for 60-ish years, is equally deplorable. But that does not excuse Crichton.
Sorry for the rant. Crichton's other books might actually be good, but not for me.


In my less-than-humble opinion, this is probably one of the best books that Turtledove ever wrote. It is based out of Constantinople, but the agent goes to different places in the medieval world. The Sci-Fi aspect is on the light side so it definitely doesn't overwhelm the story.


There is an officially adult sequel, The Far Side of Evil. I don’t remember the contents well enough to say whether it meets the medieval-type content requirement: I read it once in a library copy, whereas I had a review copy of Enchantress which I reread a couple of times.

There is an officially adult seque..."
I don't care too much for the grade level either. I tried to read all too many supposedly adult books written at the fifth grade level to care.
Besides, one cannot avoid growing old (except by dying), but one can stay immature forever! :-p


If not already mentioned, John Christopher's Tripods trilogy (starting with The White Mountains) is a cracking yarn, if a tad middle-grade for my taste these days. It's one of those series that I'll reread every few years or so. Humanity has reverted to a pre-scientific (medieval-ish) state due to alien interference and only our intrepid teenagers can come to the rescue.


https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/7...
The book, and series, have mixed reviews - you need to put up with some long explanations of ideas and tech at times
Books mentioned in this topic
Elder Race (other topics)When the Tripods Came (other topics)
Anathem (other topics)
Enchantress from the Stars (other topics)
Agent of Byzantium (other topics)
More...
Authors mentioned in this topic
Michael Crichton (other topics)Kim Stanley Robinson (other topics)
Mark Lawrence (other topics)