SciFi and Fantasy Book Club discussion
Recommendations and Lost Books
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Seeking Sci-Fi: Survival and Isolation on a Deep-Space Outpost
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It is also a very good book that teaches that cooperation and friendship are better than xenophobia and hatred.
I also read a sci-fi romance that had a similar plot. Unfortunately, I can't remember the title or the author.

Thanks, Monica! I’ll listen to the audiobook next week—sounds like a perfect way to spend my commute.
This book sounds great too, Melanie! A series to dive into—another one for my to-read shelf.
Thanks for your help!

The Martian The book was amazing even if you have seen the movie.
Island in the Sea of Time
This is not a remote outpost but Earth in the past. This emphasizes the survival without supply lines part of your wish. I found it cool how they tried to recreate technology. Not in space however so take the suggestion with a grain of salt.

I'll try to remember the title. It was a good book, a blend of space opera and sci-fi romance and action. The problem is that I read a lot of space opera books in a few weeks at the time, and their titles and authors got mixed up in my head.

Have you read both books yourself? I’d love to hear what you thought of them in more detail, especially Island in the Sea of Time. The concept of recreating technology in the past sounds fascinating!
Thanks again for sharing these suggestions!

For me the Martian was funny and a great way to celebrate smart people, problem solving, (made up) difficult problems with science.
Island in the Sky continusly made me go down rabbit holes while I was reading it, such as how do you make a sword, how do you smelt metal, how would you go about making a boat from scratch, etc. It sparked my interest in a wide variety of very odd things and it was s decent story.

Loved that one. A mystery set on a generation ship that nears its destination. Interesting worldbuilding. 👍
The Dark Beyond the Stars by Frank M. Robinson
On my TBR. Also set on a ship alone in deep space. Survival, a mad captain, and the protagonist has to figure out how the hell he got there.

It’s set in her Vor universe but doesn’t involve any of the main characters so should be able to be enjoyed without any prior Vor reading.


Thanks for your recommendation! I’m planning to read it—not this year, but definitely in 2025.
Hi Kaladin,
Great advice! I’ll make sure to read both books next year.
Hi Jan,
How nice! To be honest, Anne McCaffrey was already on my list, so I’m excited to dive into Dragonflight.
Wow, such fantastic recommendations from everyone! I really appreciate it.
Best regards,Walter


That sounds like an absolutely fascinating premise—especially the dynamics between humans, clones, and the alien species.
I’m definitely going to read 40,000 in Gehenna next year! Can’t wait to dive into Cherryh’s worldbuilding.


I second it Colin. A super interesting read.

This is one of my favorite C.J. Cherryh books, hands down!

May I recommend The Legacy of Heorot, by American writers Larry Niven, Jerry Pournelle, and Steven Barnes. The colonists from Earth have spent a century in cold sleep to make the first journey, one way, to settle a planet in another solar system.

Collin and Netanella, I appreciate the recommendation for 40,000 in Gehenna! Is it a standalone novel, or would you recommend diving into the entire series?
Hey John, thanks for the suggestion! The Legacy of Heorot sounds like exactly the kind of book I’d enjoy. Much appreciated!


It's like a coconut, the inside is much better than the outside.

People are leaving the earth going to their new home on Mars.
One spaceship with a few thousand people is pushed out of orbit by gigantic asteroids. They will never get to Mars. They will continue for ever out in space. Years and years pass by while the population onboard dwindles.

Thanks for the recommendation and for looking it up! I’ll keep the “coconut” analogy in mind and focus on the inside rather than the cover.
Thanks for the suggestion, Nike! This is exactly the kind of book I was looking for.


Although it is more of a familiar SF theme: "Ship has to make an emergency landing on a foreign planet, pilot has to fight for survival." A very dark novel that is not easily forgotten because of the protagonist's portrayed hopelessness.
Similar: Joanna Russ: "We, who are about to..." (1977).
A little more hopeful: Chris Beckett's Eden trilogy (2012-2015)
Books mentioned in this topic
Aniara: A Review of Man in Time and Space (other topics)Starkissed (other topics)
The Legacy of Heorot (other topics)
40000 in Gehenna (other topics)
40000 in Gehenna (other topics)
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Authors mentioned in this topic
Harry Martinson (other topics)Lois McMaster Bujold (other topics)
Adam Oyebanji (other topics)
Frank M. Robinson (other topics)
Michael Mammay (other topics)
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I'm looking for a sci-fi book recommendation, and I'm not sure if something like this exists, but I'd love to find it:
I'm imagining a story set on a deep-space station or a remote outpost where the inhabitants are completely cut off from their home planet. There's no contact, no supply lines—just the people living there, trying to survive and explore in an isolated and harsh environment. I'd love a book that dives into the challenges of survival, the exploration of the unknown, and the human dynamics of being on your own in a vast, uncharted universe.
If you've read something like this, please share your recommendations—I’d love to hear them!