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A great sci-fi trilogy
Titan is a science fiction novel by American writer John Varley, the first book in his Gaea Trilogy, published in 1979. It won the 1980 Locus Award for Best Science Fiction Novel and was nominated for both the Nebula Award for Best Novel in 1979, and the Hugo Award for Best Novel in 1980.
Some of my favorite novels are 'the forever war' and 'stranger in a strange land' |
The forever war is amazing, Im about to finish The Murderbot Diaries and then will start on Titan or Stranger in a Strange Land.
Thanks for the suggestions. :) |
Titan is mind boggeling...hell I should read the trilogy again.
Forever war is deff a great read. The flow up novels, not so much Check out 'swan song' Robert maccamon |
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Murderbot is soooooooo good. I love the alienated social analysis. So witty it makes me literally laugh out loud. |
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I just finished reading the first book in Arkady Martine's series about empire. She is a professor of like Byzantine social structures and that definitely informs her work.
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Joe halderman, the forever war. Check it out |
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I read the Titan - Wizard - Demon trilogy a long time ago. It remember thinking it was definitely good but not quite a classic.
Not a trilogy, but I just re-read "The Moon is a Harsh Mistress" by Heinlein. Published in 1966, it's about AI and revolution of exploited moon colonists against Earth. It struck me how much The Expanse (book and TV series) seemed to borrow from some of the basic premises. Some of Heinlein's lesser novels are quite good, and feature recurring characters. Also, check out the Vorkosigan Saga by Bujold. |
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That is interesting. I know oddly little about Tolkien's background. Depends a bit on what sort of detective novels you like, but I'd recommend Robert Kroese's The Big Sheep for a fun cyberpunk detective read to get your science fiction and detective on. |
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The novels with Smokey Barrett, this stuff is really devious. Books like this I do not reread, too powerful emotionally for me. I reread books like forever war. Great fast-paced read. Great Sci-Fi another powerful read: The thicket, Joe Landsdale A wild story about the old west... really really powerful |
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Heinlein was a contemporary of L. Ron Hubbard. It is widely believed that Hubbard and Heinlein made a bet in a bar one night either that Hubbard could not create a religion, or to see which of the two could create a religion first. I think Heinlein could have easily turned Stranger into a Scientology-like religion if he wanted. |
Sci-fi is for children . . .
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