Top 100 Science-Fiction, Fantasy Books

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Re: Top 100 Science-Fiction, Fantasy Books

Postby justdrew » Thu Jan 12, 2012 11:14 am

Twyla LaSarc wrote:
Hugh Manatee Wins wrote:Neil Gaimon is a spook author.

National Propaganda Radio (NPR) recently started a kidz book feature called 'Back Seat Reading Club' that started out with Gaimon's
decoy book about the revival of the Spanish Influenza using corpses dug up out of the permafrost.

Gaimon teamed up with dupe Terry Pratchett to satirize 'The Omen' which was itself a decoy of a NATO nuke targeting plan called 'Clarinet Omen.'

spooks eat kidz for breakfast. and get rich doing so.



He is a scientologist.

https://whyweprotest.net/community/thre ... ont.57367/

He may or may not be working for the CIA and he has his own agenda.

I liked Sandman, Good Omens (Pratchett, c'mon Omen is so effin pop culture, you could hide a barn behind it, I found it good fun) and Anansi Boys.

I make sure my money doesn't go to what his family has committed him to.



http://www.newyorker.com/reporting/2010/01/25/100125fa_fact_goodyear?currentPage=all

disappointing. but he says he's NOT, though it seems he's not particularly against them either.
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Re: Top 100 Science-Fiction, Fantasy Books

Postby semiconscious » Thu Jan 12, 2012 2:29 pm

slomo wrote:Reading Paolo Bacigalupi's The Windup Girl. Some very RI themes there. Kind of bleak. Anybody else read it?


Image

think i posted about this book in another thread. extremely insightful, impressive book, & easily among the best i've read in the last few years. very 'max headroom / 20 minutes from now' type futuristic :) ...

'pump 6', his short story collection, is also excellent - the story itself is as good a short description of where what we call civilization is currently headed as you're likely to find...
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Re: Top 100 Science-Fiction, Fantasy Books

Postby Skunkboy » Sat Jan 14, 2012 1:54 am

semiconscious wrote:

slomo wrote:

Reading Paolo Bacigalupi's The Windup Girl. Some very RI themes there. Kind of bleak. Anybody else read it?


think i posted about this book in another thread. extremely insightful, impressive book, & easily among the best i've read in the last few years. very 'max headroom / 20 minutes from now' type futuristic ...

'pump 6', his short story collection, is also excellent - the story itself is as good a short description of where what we call civilization is currently headed as you're likely to find...


Yeah, this one is third down on my Amazon "wish list"... may have to move it up.

Jeff wrote:

Two I don't think have been mentioned yet which made similar impressions on my adolescent mind were L Sprague de Camp's Lest Darkness Fall and Fritz Leiber's Gather, Darkness! The former was an alt-history of time travel and enlightening the Dark Ages, and the latter was a post-apocalpyptic tale of techno-priests, bad faith, and a revolution of liberating witchcraft.


I was also a fan of L Sprague de Camp and Lin Carter's Conan and Fritz Leibers, Farfard and the Grey Mouser stories. They too were a balm to my fever dream "adolescent mind", as was Sterling Laniers Hiero's Journey series.


On a side note, maybe I should rename this thread the " Fuck the Top 100 Sci-fi book lists! " just to keep the continuity of the threads going. :wink
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Re: Top 100 Science-Fiction, Fantasy Books

Postby vanlose kid » Sat Jan 14, 2012 2:13 am

love this thread. picking up lots of tips too, so thanks all.

have to mention Burning Chrome. think it's one of the best short story collections out there. and if anyone else is into short stories here are two by an author i'm just getting to know and like, Maureen McHugh:

The Naturalist

Cahill lived in the Flats with about twenty other guys in a place that used to be an Irish bar called Fado. At the back of the bar was the Cuyahoga River, good for protection since zombies didn’t cross the river. They didn’t crumble into dust, they were just stupid as bricks and they never built a boat or a bridge or built anything. Zombies were the ultimate trash. Worse than the guys who cooked meth in trailers. Worse than the fat women on WIC. Zombies were just useless dumbfucks.

“They’re too dumb to find enough food to keep a stray cat going,” Duck said.

Cahill was talking to a guy called Duck. Well, really, Duck was talking and Cahill was mostly listening. Duck had been speculating on the biology of zombies. He thought that the whole zombie thing was a virus, like Mad Cow Disease. A lot of the guys thought that. A lot of them mentioned that movie, 28 Days where everybody but a few people had been driven crazy by a virus.

“But they gotta find something,” Duck said. Duck had a prison tattoo of a mallard on his arm. Cahill wouldn’t have known it was a mallard if Duck hadn’t told him. He could just about tell it was a bird. Duck was over six feet tall and Cahill would have hated to have been the guy who gave Duck such a shitty tattoo cause Duck probably beat him senseless when he finally got a look at the thing. “Maybe,” Duck mused, “maybe they’re solar powered. And eating us is just a bonus.”

“I think they go dormant when they don’t smell us around,” Cahill said...

http://subterraneanpress.com/index.php/ ... en-mchugh/


The Kingdom of the Blind

by Maureen F. McHugh Author spotlight

Published November 2011 | 6249 words
After the Apocalypse by Maureen McHugh

This story also appears in Maureen F. McHugh’s new collection, After the Apocalypse, which is available now from Small Beer Press.

At 3:17 EST, the lights at DM Kensington Medical did the wave. Starting at the east end of the building, the lights went out, and after just a couple of seconds, came back on. The darkness went down the hall. Staff looked up. It was a local version of a rolling blackout, a kind of weird utility/weather event. In its wake, IV alarms went off, monitors re-set. Everything critical was on back-up but not everything was critical, some of it was just important, and some of it wasn’t even important, unless you consider coffee a life-or-death substance. Which for a resident, might be true. It was not life-threatening in the immediate sense, but it wasn’t trivial and it interrupted two nurses and a resident working on a woman in ICU having seizures, a pharmacist counting meds, a CT Scan, a couple of X-rays, and it derailed a couple of consultations. The line of darkness washed across the buildings, leapt the parking lot, split into two parts and then washed north and south simultaneously across a complex of medical offices.

At 3:21, the same thing happened at UH Southpoint Medical. UH Southpoint was in Tennessee and Kensington was in Texas. At 3:25 it rolled through Seattle Kellerman, although there it started in the north and went south. The three hospitals were all part of the Benevola Health Network. Their physical plant—thermostats, lights, hot water and air filtration—were all handled by BHP DMS, a software system. Specifically by a subroutine called SAMEDI. SAMEDI was not an acronym. It was the name of a Haitian Voodoo loa, a possession spirit. A lot of the subroutines in BHP DMS were named for Haitian loa. The system that monitored lab results and watched for emergent epidemiological trends (a fancy way of saying something that noticed if there were signs of say, an upsurge in cases of West Nile virus, or an outbreak of food poisoning symptoms across several local ERs) was called LEGBA, after the guardian of the crossroads, the trickster who managed traffic between life and the spiritworld. Some programmer had undoubtedly been very pleased with themselves.

The problem line lit up in BHP DMS IT.

“Sydney, phone,” Damien said.

“You get it.”

“You’re the least Aspergers person in the department. It’s that having two X chromosomes thing.”

Actually, the only people in the department who were clinically Aspergers were probably Dale, who was a hardware guy, and their boss, Tony.

“In the kingdom of the blind,” Sydney said. “The one-eyed girl is king.”

“The difference between ‘see/not see’ is a lot bigger than the difference between one eye and two eyes,” Damien said...

http://www.lightspeedmagazine.com/ficti ... the-blind/


carry on.
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Re: Top 100 Science-Fiction, Fantasy Books

Postby Twyla LaSarc » Sat Jan 14, 2012 5:39 pm

justdrew wrote:

http://www.newyorker.com/reporting/2010/01/25/100125fa_fact_goodyear?currentPage=all

disappointing. but he says he's NOT, though it seems he's not particularly against them either.


I don't expect him necessarily to renounce them given his family being in(disconnection being at this point a documented phenomenon); but to have a good portion of his income going to them, and his children being raised in it makes me a little uneasy about carelessly flinging money at his (considerable) talent. I enjoy used as much as new :wink and have a library above my head :D...

At least he's one ex-sea org member who had something to fall back on after routing out.
_______________________________________________________
Back to sci-fi:


Willow just turned me onto Jasper FForde's work which is giving me a much needed sci-fi fix right now(Reading 'Ayre Affair'), Been enjoying Dan Simmons, but I prefer his horror (Drood, The Terror) to his sci-fi.

If one can find it, Phillip DiFilippo's 'Ribofunk' is as disturbing a collection of short stories you will ever find. There's some shit in it that's just wrong. But it will stick with you and make you think, which is, I suppose, the point.
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Re: Top 100 Science-Fiction, Fantasy Books

Postby Harvey » Sat Jan 14, 2012 5:48 pm

Re-reading Driftglass, particularly Delany's short fiction masterpiece The Starpit. Recently had a number of Ellison first editions (and several PKD first editions too) arrive in my bookshop. It was a pleasure to finally read through Paingod and The Beast Who Shouted Love At The Heart Of The World.
And while we spoke of many things, fools and kings
This he said to me
"The greatest thing
You'll ever learn
Is just to love
And be loved
In return"


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Re: Top 100 Science-Fiction, Fantasy Books

Postby Twyla LaSarc » Sat Jan 14, 2012 5:59 pm

Harvey wrote:Re-reading Driftglass, particularly Delany's short fiction masterpiece The Starpit. Recently had a number of Ellison first editions (and several PKD first editions too) arrive in my bookshop. It was a pleasure to finally read through Paingod and The Beast Who Shouted Love At The Heart Of The World.


I love Ellison. Strange Wine is probably my favorite collection, and I love Spider Kiss (aka Rockabilly) which isn't sci- fi at all but very good. Like Dick he also wrote straight novels in the 50's.

His essays are, IMO, the best of his work. The 'Glass Teat' essays, The intro to Strange Wine: IIRC: "What Killed the Dinosaurs (and you don't look so good yourself), etc were seminal in positing some of the issues of media that we are exploring to this day. Yeah, he's an asshole personally but I enjoy him a writer.

PS: Lucky you in an actual bookshop! :thumbsup
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Re: Top 100 Science-Fiction, Fantasy Books

Postby NeonLX » Sun Jan 15, 2012 11:29 am

slomo wrote:Reading Paolo Bacigalupi's The Windup Girl. Some very RI themes there. Kind of bleak. Anybody else read it?


No, but I'm gonna.

I'm trying to slog through Kim Stanley Robinson's _Forty Signs of Rain_ right now. I'm about 75 pages into it and having a devil of a time making any headway. Not sure what my hangup is.
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Re: Top 100 Science-Fiction, Fantasy Books

Postby Twyla LaSarc » Sun Jan 15, 2012 2:54 pm

Someone at work was telling me about 'Windup Girl' a few weeks ago.

I guess it's on the list now.
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Re: Top 100 Science-Fiction, Fantasy Books

Postby vanlose kid » Mon Jan 16, 2012 11:05 am

since they haven't been mentioned yet (strange):

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The Witcher, or Polish: Wiedźmin, by Polish writer Andrzej Sapkowski is a cult[1] series of fantasy short stories (collected in two books, except for two stories) and five novels about the witcher Geralt of Rivia. In Sapkowski's books, witchers are monster-hunters who receive special training and have their bodies modified at an early age to provide them with supernatural abilities so they can battle extremely dangerous monsters and survive. The books have been adapted into a movie and television series, a video game series, and a graphic novel series. The novel series (excluding the short stories) is also called the Witcher Saga (Polish: Saga o Wiedźminie) or the Blood of the Elves Saga. The Witcher short stories and novels have been translated into several languages.

https://secure.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/ ... tcher_Saga


edit: don't know about the video games, only know that they exist.

the books are magnificently Grimm.

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Re: Top 100 Science-Fiction, Fantasy Books

Postby vanlose kid » Fri Jan 20, 2012 2:30 pm

odd ones out:

Jeff Noon

Image

VURT

Take a trip in a strangers head. Along rainshot streets with the Stash Riders, a posse of hip malcontents hooked on the most powerful drug you can imagine. Vurt Feathers. But as the Game Cat says, be careful, be very careful. This ride is not for the weak. Scribble isnt listening. He has to find his lost love. A journey towards the ultimate, perhaps even mythical, Vurt feather - Curious Yellow.

I'd spent a good number of years trying to make some money by writing plays, with no real success. So I took a job at Waterstone's bookshop in Manchester. Someone else working there was a fringe theatre director and was always asking me to write him a play. The only project I had in mind was an adaptation of Octave Mirbeau's "The Torture Garden". This was an anti-authoritarian novel written in 1899, and one that I always felt could have a modern relevance. At this time also, news of the first developments in Virtual Reality technology was just coming over from the States, specifically in the magazine Mondo2000. I came up with the idea that the Torture Garden in the novel could be represented by a virtual world. The only trouble being that the book doesn't really have a narrative as such, more a series of images. So I added this story to it, about a man losing his sister to this virtual Torture Garden, and going into the world to rescue her. I wrote about half of this play, when the director got a chance to work in Hong Kong, which he took. So I was left with half a play.

A few weeks later, another person at the shop decided to set up a small publishing house called Ringpull Press. He liked my plays, and asked me to have a go at writing a novel. I said I would, and started writing Vurt. And quite naturally, I took the basic plot I'd added to the Torture Garden as my starting point. It grew organically from that seed.

I can remember writing the bit where the heroes are down below the house of dogs, running through the lake of dogshit, and thinking, "Why the hell am I doing this to them?" It reminded me of the scene in the first "Star Wars" film, where they're trapped in the Deathstar's sewer, and that got me thinking about other connections to "Stars Wars". There seemed so many of them, it made me think about Joseph Campbell's "The Hero with a Thousand Faces, which George Lucas used as his starting point for the film. The book examines myths from all around the world, in order to chart the ultimate narrative. I'd read this book a few years before, and it became obvious that I'd used the same structure in Vurt. I won't go into it further, because readers may want to discover the parallels for themselves.

http://www.bulletsofautumn.com/vurt-fea ... orpho.html


David Mitchell

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Ghostwritten

David Mitchell
US: Random House, 2000, $24.95 h/b
UK: Sceptre, 1999, £10 p/b

Why do things happen? That’s the big subject for novels. Why did Anna throw herself under the train? Why did Raskolnikov repent? Chance or fate? An old choice, and neither convinces, so rewind the tape and try to figure it out. A character in David Mitchell’s Ghostwritten ponders a rugby match:

‘When the players are out there the game is a sealed arena of inter-bombarding chance. But when the game is on video then even the tiniest action already exists. The past, present, and future exist at the same time: all the tape is there, in your hand. There can be no chance, for every human decision and random fall of the ball is already fated. Therefore, does chance or fate control our lives? Well, the answer is as relative as time. If you’re in your life, chance. Viewed from the outside, like a book you’re reading, it’s fate all the way.’

Having lost the belief that we can ever really know the causes of an event, we have also lost faith in omniscient narrators. They peered down on the lives of their creations like spy satellites fixing their lenses, or they pried into their consciousness like a migrating spirit (both cues that Mitchell picks up). Contemporary novels tend to follow or be narrated by a character who participates in the story, who cannot know the context in which they were living (just as we can’t know the contexts of our lives). They cannot know their true motivations, nor the consequences of their actions that ripple out beyond their view.

Beneath character and plot lie the mysteries of subjective experience and causality. This is where Buddhism comes in. Or at least it could and should, because these are its abiding concerns. A Dharma novelist worthy of the name will know that things arise in dependence upon conditions: some of the conditions we know, some are mysterious – and both kinds are important.

Think of the universe of human consciousness as it exists right now – six billion minds whirring away, trying to make sense, trying to cope: loving, fearing, desiring. Why are they the way they are? Let’s say it’s conditions (knowable, and mysterious). But you cannot separate the conditions that impinge on someone from the way those conditions are experienced. So imagine you could download into a consciousness, like a computer file downloading from the internet (and Mitchell plays with this, too) into any one of those six billion. You could know how it felt to be Chinese or Russian, you could switch sex, experience growing old or dying, and then switch out again. But could you both inhabit that subjectivity and at the same time step back to see the causes and the effects?

That is what David Mitchell attempts in Ghostwritten, and he is a candidate to be the first real Dharma novelist in the modern world. The book comprises 10 linked monologues, each character occupying a radically different set of values, drives and pre-occupations. It starts with a Japanese fanatic who has set off a subway sarin gas attack. Then come a Japanese teenager falling in love, a financial lawyer in Hong Kong whose shady dealings are catching up with him, a Chinese peasant, a St Petersburg criminal, a London musician and ghostwriter, a quantum physicist on the cusp of a breakthrough, a New York late-night chat show host. And there are two disembodied consciousnesses whose identities I shall not divulge.

Ghostwritten also shows a world shot through with Buddhism, from the millennial distortions of Aum Shinrikyu, to the giant Buddha in Hong Kong, a long-suffering Chinese devotee, a Gelugpa performing consciousness transference, a ‘sort-of-Buddhist Londoner’, and a computer called Arupadhatu (which is the sphere of no form, because we might as well say that is where a computer consciousness would exist).

Each has a wonderful story to tell, and Mitchell has a generous imagination. He could have devoted a novel to any of these characters, and a lesser writer would have hoarded the ideas that pour out of each page of Ghostwritten. Mitchell is an excellent stylist who can give you lyricism, fear or compulsion as his story requires. As his perspective transmigrates from subject to subject he touches into a range of genres, including the thriller and science fiction, But above all, with the aid of numerous literary influences, he manages superbly the 10-fold ventriloquism required to articulate his personae.

Establishing each voice is important because it articulates a worldview. Mitchell writes others’ lives like a ghostwriter. But, as one of the characters suggests, our lives are themselves a form of ghostwriting, scripted by forces beyond us, even though we claim to be their authors.

This is Mitchell’s first novel, and it reminded me of other first novels like Catch 22 or A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man. It creates a form tthat is able to express a new kind of consciousness, and a new experience of the world. This is a novel for the interconnected, globalised times in which we are buffeted among billions; it offers not so much an answer as a neural network of thought, not so much an argument as ideas whirring like minds, and interacting like electrons.

http://www.dharmalife.com/issue15/inter ... ripts.html


Mitchell's third Cloud Atlas is due as a movie in 2012:

Concept Art and First Still Image from The Wachowskis’ Cloud Atlas
Posted 12.29.11 by BrentJS

It's been extremely quiet on the Cloud Atlas front since the sci-fi epic co-written and co-directed by Andy and Lana Wachowski (The Matrix) and German filmmaker Tom Tykwer (Run Lola Run, The International) went into production in Glasgow, Scotland, and Potsdam-Babelsberg, Germany, in September. Other than the "spy" photos of Hugo Weaving and Halle Berry on the set in Glasgow, the only thing we've seen or heard about the movie since production began is the production photo featuring the trio of directors that apparently includes several key props from each of the movie's six interconnected storylines. Now, however, Korean movie site HanCinema has posted online two gorgeous pieces of concept art and a still image from the movie that features South Korean actress Doo-na Bae (The Host) as Sonmi-451, a clone living in dystopian Seoul, Korea, in 2144.

Cloud Atlas is based on David Mitchell's award-winning 2004 sci-fi novel of the same name. Here's the official movie synopsis.

An epic story of humankind in which the actions and consequences of our lives impact one another throughout the past, present and future as one soul is shaped from a murderer into a savior and a single act of kindness ripples out for centuries to inspire a revolution.


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The cast of Cloud Atlas includes Hugh Grant, Jim Sturgess, Jim Broadbent, Keith David, Ben Whishaw Tom Hanks, and Susan Sarandon. The movie does not yet have a release date, but it is aimed at an October 2012 opening.

http://www.reelz.com/movie-news/12708/c ... oud-atlas/


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Re: Top 100 Science-Fiction, Fantasy Books

Postby Harvey » Fri Jan 20, 2012 2:42 pm

It's funny, I used to shop at Waterstones as a boy, at exactly the time Jeff Noon was working there. I don't remember seeing him but then again why would I?

I also used to go to the Cornerhouse theatre to watch French films and would come out and the person I was with would say, "Hey did you notice Eric Cantona in there?" I'd say "Eric who?"

: )
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This he said to me
"The greatest thing
You'll ever learn
Is just to love
And be loved
In return"


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Re: Top 100 Science-Fiction, Fantasy Books

Postby Harvey » Sat Jan 21, 2012 10:15 am

vanlose kid wrote:odd ones out:


Now you've got me thinking about those books which had a disproportionately large affect upon me without also being those books which leap to mind in a standard favourites list. Granted I haven't been as current with SF as I used to be for some years now, but here are a few.

Coelestis by Paul Park


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A distant outpost of galactic empire is home to two indigenous sentient species. One of these, roughly humanoid, is drugged, surgically altered and taught to play Beethoven. The other alien species, larger, more dangerous and less humanoid, the Coelestis, were untameable. Having an almost mystical relationship of control over the Aboriginals, they were wiped out.

The story takes place as an envoy to Earth Simon Marayam and one of the deracinated Aboriginals Katharine Styreme are abducted by a mutiny under the control of the very much still living Coelestis. As the novel progresses, and as Styreme is no longer able to maintain the drugs which ‘humanise’ her, an older, more native perception begins to re-assert itself.




Sarah Canary by Karen Joy Fowler

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One of those great under-rated Science Fiction novels of first contact and a revelatory submersion in otherness through the various encounters with it's enigmatic central character, Sarah Canary. But let someone else describe her better:

Kathleen Ann Goonan

The book opens in the Washington Territory, circa 1873. The laborers in a Chinese railroad workers camp are startled to see a white woman materialize from the forest. Sarah Canary does not speak; she only makes sounds--sometimes melodious, sometimes a series of clicks. Nor does she ever communicate with humans in any meaningful way, save when she kicks a man intending to rape her and stabs him with a chopstick.

Chin, the aforementioned scholar, at first takes the woman for an immortal, a goddess whose ways are inscrutable to humans. Chin feels compelled to lead her back to the town he supposes she has come from. Their travels take them to Steilacoom, where they are briefly confined. Chin is forced to hang an Indian in order to secure his freedom from jail, and the woman is whisked away to the Steilacoom Asylum, where she is christened Sarah Canary by an inmate.

Expensively clothed and unknowable, Sarah remains a cipher throughout the book. But the true cipher--the genius which lies within the concept of the zero, or within the encoded message--can contain a wealth of meanings.

Anyone familiar with the history of misogyny will remember Dr. Moebius, a respected contemporary of Freud, who declared, "The differences in head between the sexes, just as those between the races, must be reduced to mental differences. It is clear enough that the relationship between brain and body is not the same in the two sexes. A normal man, even if he be small, needs a head circumference of at least 53 sm, whereas a woman gets along well with 51 cm. Thus, for the tasks of a woman's life, a brain that has room within a head of 51 cm is sufficient. But for the tasks of a man's life it is not enough. With 51 cm one can be an intelligent woman, but not an intelligent man."

This is the social milieu we are made aware of, and which we never leave, once we enter the Steilacoom Territorial Asylum. Dr. Carr, director of the Steilacoom Asylum, contributes such gems as "The gray substance and the white substance in the male brain are also heavier than in the female," and concludes that "Men are better at manly things. Women are better at being women." After Sarah Canary swallows the watch with which Dr. Carr has attempted to hypnotize her, he says, "I don't think this session can usefully continue. I think the basic trust necessary between patient and doctor has been somewhat violated."

During their stay at the Asylum, Chin and Sarah meet B.J., an inmate, who often returns to a slit in the wood of the kitchen door frame to touch it; it is the record of the time a cleaver was thrown at him and missed. In this way B.J. proves to himself that he exists. When Chin and Sarah leave the Asylum, B.J. comes along, doubting his existence and his perceptions.

From this point, early in the book, the action never stops. Chin, Sarah, and B.J. journey through a complex and fully-realized landscape in the territory around Seattle. They encounter many eccentric characters, and fall into and out of outre' situations with commendable narrative drive.

During calm moments in their adventures, Chin, B.J. and the others that join them along the way speculate as to who Sarah Canary might be, and the nature of her malady. She reminds Chin (at first) of his heritage as a member of a rich culture to whom goddesses appear. B.J. cannot--particularly at a crucial moment near the end of the book--look at Sarah, as he is unable to directly look at the fact of his own existence. To Adelaide, she is initially an admired compatriot and ally in the war against men. Harold, the survivor of Andersonville, considers himself immortal, and sees immortality in Sarah Canary.

But just who is she?

...she could be an alien who perhaps was deposited by a ship which may have appeared as " . . . a small but exceedingly bright point near the limits of the corona, just below the circle of the moon and in the general area of the anvil-shaped protuberance." Her dress, with its lack of fastenings, "mends itself," B.J. (a less-than-reliable narrator) notes...The enigmatic presence of Sarah Canary in their lives transforms each of the characters in fundamental ways. Chin "rejoiced in the straight, simple line his life had become." in the wake of his contact with Sarah Canary. He has, literally, been straightened out...

The ambiguity and emphasis on perception is what lies like a diamond at the core of this fine novel. As the book closes, Chin thinks, "A man says something. Sometimes it turns out to be the truth, but this has nothing to do with the man who says it. What we say occupies a very thin surface, like the skin over a body of water. Beneath this, through the water itself, is what we see, sometimes clearly if the water is calm, sometimes vaguely if the water is troubled, and we imagine this vision to be the truth, clear or vague. But beneath this is yet another level. This is the level of what is and this level has nothing to do with what we say or what we see."



Bios by Robert Charles Wilson

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Potential colonists to an alien planet Isis are sending expeditions from an orbital station, trying to reveal it's deadly charms, but the realisation grows that all life on the world is becoming more effective in breaching their attempts to contain it, and more deadly with each day that passes. The profound ending of this slight but well written adventure was what really stayed with me. As an adventure it recalls Harry Harrisons death World series and Niven, Pournelle and Barnes Legacy of Heorot but also reminded me of the transcendent power of novels like Ian Watson's Miracle Visitors

Miracle Visitors by Ian Watson

Ian Watson is the author of The Martian Inca and short story collections such as The Very Slow Time Machine, and Evil Water. He remains one of science fictions best kept secrets. Certainly as time goes by fewer genre fans seem aware of his considerable body of work. I discovered his books about the same time as Phil Dick, Tom Disch and M. John Harrison. Like them he blew my little mind. This novel from 1978 was a particular treat.

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punkadiddle.blogspot.com

The story seems simple enough: comely young Michael Peacocke is abducted by a sexy alien in a glowing UFO over the Yorkshire Moors as a schoolboy; he recovers the memory of this encounter only later, under hypnosis by John Deacon, a scientist working with a ‘Consciousness Research Group’ at the ‘University of Granton’. Deacon becomes convinced that he has developed a new explanation for the larger UFO phenomenon, as a new mode of human consciousness rather than as actual alien spaceships from other stars; and investigating further he himself starts to see unidentified objects—a flying monster, a glowing ball of light that visits his house and decapitates his pet dog, and various other things. Deacon, Peacocke and an ex-USAF pilot called Shriver who specialises in hunting UFOs find themselves following an increasingly complicated extraterrestrial spoor: Peacocke’s girlfriend Suzie sees devils, and is harassed by some fairly incompetent Men in Black; Deacon is mysteriously transported to Egypt, where he meets a holy man; Peacocke himself is approached by bizarre-looking herbivorous aliens from Cassiopeia, who tell him that Deacon’s theories are right, UFO’s are a kind of materialised collective hallucination, or perhaps an emanation from the spiritus mundi, but that they—the Gebraudi—are not manifestations, and are rather actual EBEs, come to warn Earth of the terrible danger we are in, of which the UFO’s are a symptom. The plot and concepts involved get more complicatedly origami-folded as the book goes on—a genuinely impressive achievement, in terms of the structuring and pacing of the whole, I thought, since Watson never loses control of it. The complete novel demonstrates amazing aesthetic and conceptual coherence, despite being built around an ontology that is deliberately incoherent; repeatedly lurching adjustments of our sense of what is constituted by ‘reality’ à-la-Philip Dick, though Watson is a much better writer of English prose than PKD.



Eternity and Other Stories by Lucius Shepard

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I haven't read this entire collection yet but judging by the controversy regarding his 9-11 story on the Amazon page seems, it seems like a good place to start but my point is I've read a lot of his short fiction in brilliant collections such as The Jaguar Hunter, The Ends of the Earth.

He has written a large body of fantasy tales set in Central America which have had a profound effect upon this reader over many years. The sense of character, mystery and landscape is skillfully evoked, but that dislocation from the everyday, from the here and now, which is the stock in trade of science fiction is rendered precisely and brilliantly through the everyday itself. (Granted a few slightly more exotic locations on the whole.) Stories such as thge brilliant R&R for example.

The Man Who Painted The Dragon Griaule by Shepard is definitely in my top 20 SF&F short stories, a novella about a man for whom the slaying of the vast sleeping dragon which forms the entire landscape of his people, becomes a creative act and the task of the whole community, for their lifetime.

The sense of other is probably as condensed in the short fiction of Lucius Shepard as I've found it anywhere in genre.


(Well, anywhere apart from the incomparable fiction of Jonathan Carrol and John Crowley author of Little Big but that's another post entirely.)
And while we spoke of many things, fools and kings
This he said to me
"The greatest thing
You'll ever learn
Is just to love
And be loved
In return"


Eden Ahbez
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Re: Top 100 Science-Fiction, Fantasy Books

Postby Plutonia » Sun Jan 22, 2012 12:40 am

I haven't read them yet but ....

Steal This Book!

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Nobody wants to be told that their business model is obsolete. Ask Kodak. Or Hollywood. And the publishing industry is slower on its feet than most. Bookstores don’t want to believe that they’ll ultimately lose 75% of their pre-e-book business to that scourge plus Amazon delivery. (I’m assuming e-book market share will eventually plateau somewhere north of 50%.) Meanwhile, publishers cling to the model wherein readers purchase books individually, usually before they’ve been read: a model so entrenched that many seem to find it literally impossible to believe that alternatives might exist.

I’ve been lamenting that paucity of imagination in my columns here for some time now. It’s why publishers have lashed out so ineptly at any suggestion of a subscription model. But I’ve also been saying for five years that publishing’s business model will ultimately become even less restrictive than that. In the end, lo these many decades from now, most books–and all novels–will be free to read, and their readers will decide whether and how much to pay for them after reading them.

I know, big talk, no action, right? So:

The rights to my technothriller Invisible Armies finally reverted to me last month. It’s my personal favorite among my thrillers; it’s won acclaim from The Economist, Bruce Sterling, and a host of others — and now I’m releasing it and its sort-of-sequel Swarm1 online, for free, under a Creative Commons license. You can download them to the device of your choice from Feedbooks. (Which, by the way, is awesome. Android users: the mega-popular Aldiko e-reader app is one of several with built-in Feedbooks integration)

Download Invisible Armies: http://www.feedbooks.com/userbook/24564 ... ble-armies
Download Swarm: http://www.feedbooks.com/userbook/24466/swarm

(Some Kindle users may have to sideload, I’m afraid. Sorry. Talk to Amazon.)

Anyone who wants to pay for either book after they read it can buy an e-copy from iBooks or the Kindle Store1 at their leisure. (I’m deliberately not linking to either here.) That’s pretty clumsy, I know: I expect that in the future e-books will come with a “Pay What You Want” interface on the very last page. But hey, you have to start somewhere.

Obviously I’m far from the first to free my books. The Baen Free Library has been around for years. Tim O’Reilly says, “In my experience, losses due to piracy are far outweighed by the benefits of the free flow of information, which makes the world richer, and develops new markets for legitimate content.” And Cory Doctorow, of course, has been doing it for his entire oeuvre from day one.

But Cory is kind of sui generis. The real test is whether a critical mass of hundreds, if not thousands, of writers — especially ones who, like me, have been previously anointed as Real Authors by the almighty dinosaurs of the publishing industry — start doing it. And, well, here’s one more small step in that direction. Let’s see where we all end up.

Invisible Armies is about hackers, anti-corporate protestors, globalization, and the surveillance society;
Swarm is about fleets of UAVs in The Wrong Hands.


http://techcrunch.com/2012/01/21/steal-this-book/
[the British] government always kept a kind of standing army of news writers who without any regard to truth, or to what should be like truth, invented & put into the papers whatever might serve the minister

T Jefferson,
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Re: Top 100 Science-Fiction, Fantasy Books

Postby justdrew » Mon Jan 23, 2012 3:50 am

a little tidbit Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy readers may recognize:

“What is the answer?” she asked, and when no answer came she laughed and said: “Then, what is the question?”
— Reputedly the last words of Gertrude Stein
By 1964 there were 1.5 million mobile phone users in the US
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