Rose65
Well-known Member
- Location
- United Kingdom
Indeed, as a species we are truly terrible and highly dangerous.
Indeed, as a species we are truly terrible and highly dangerous.
You can't go wrong with "I, Robot!" Amazon Kindle CA $ 7.99 at the moment!Asimov is such a big name in SF, I shall certainly explore his books.
@Devi Glad to see a fellow fan! I watched every episode of Stargate SG1 and Atlantis! I loved most of Robert Heinlein's books but found Stranger in a Strange Land and the follow-ups too much of a departure from his previous books! I read and enjoyed most of the sci-fi authors of his time (Silverberg, Simak, Farmer, Clarke, Anderson etc.) except for Philip K. Dick whose stories were a bit too grim for my taste. Yet, surprisingly, many sci-fi movies are based on his stories!Love sci-fi. One time in the late 60's when I was at the San Francisco Airport (SFO), I bought every Heinlein paperback book they had on sale. Read them all, too.
First read Heinlein's Stranger in a Strange Land in college. Very different.
Currently, we are watching the sci-fi series(es) Stargate SG1 and Stargate Atlantis. Very entertaining. We get them on DVD from Amazon.
Yep, Stranger in a Strange Land started out great, but got ... well ... strange towards the end.I watched every episode of Stargate SG1 and Atlantis! I loved most of Robert Heinlein's books but found Stranger in a Strange Land and the follow-ups too much of a departure from his previous books! I read and enjoyed most of the sci-fi authors of his time (Silverberg, Simak, Farmer, Clarke, Anderson etc.) except for Philip K. Dick whose stories were a bit too grim for my taste. Yet, surprisingly, many sci-fi movies are based on his stories!
I forgot the greatest of them all, Asimov, (I did mention him earlier) and to be honest had to look up sci-fi authors of the fifties and sixties because I had forgotten their names!Yep, Stranger in a Strange Land started out great, but got ... well ... strange towards the end.
I've read other sci-fi authors, but I'm not recalling whom/what at the moment. There is also Isaac Asimov.
Yea me too! But now in my old age I am starting to read some SF. Of course, as with most type of literature, works are much more sophisticated now since science has advanced so much in the last 60-70 years.I read a lot of SF while in grade/high school. Then I seriously studied physics and the whole imaginary SF world faded away.
I think ordinary SF changed too much for my taste in the eighties! I now read military SF a la David Weber! The Honor books are great!Yea me too! But now in my old age I am starting to read some SF. Of course, as with most type of literature, works are much more sophisticated now since science has advanced so much in the last 60-70 years.
@dilettante: Stargate SG1 premiered in 1997, Stargate SG1 books were first published in 2011 while the Bob Mayer books (often written by others) only showed up a year after, in 2012, so your slightly condescending critique seems to be off a bit! I don't mind, though! I always had a hard time digesting that all the alien cultures SG-1 came into contact with, spoke perfect English! I loved it just the same even though it wasn't perfect. To me it was perfect entertainment and that was enough! But Sitcom? I liked the bantering but sitcom? That's harsh!Bob Mayer wrote and published (under the name Robert Doherty) a large series of Area 51 books. These were not UFO stories as such though they took off from that point and went into a great deal of other similar fringe material and mythology. Almost all of it is set "in present time" except for brief historical flashbacks.
This is military/political/adventure science fiction, and suspiciously enough an awful lot of the Stargate television franchise seems to have copied idea after idea from the Area 51 books. Maybe you can think Stargate but broader in scope and without the rubber noses and floppy shoes. Of course most of the Stargate fan base is there for its "Friends through the gate" ensemble sitcom aspects. They probably won't enjoy the Area 51 books which lack most of the slapstick and wise cracking.
Don't get me wrong, I like the Stargate series and movies but SG-1 and Atlantis in particular are really sitcoms. The 3rd series Universe tried to get serious and most of the fan base rebelled and still whinge about it today even though in season 2 the show was revamped with more 'splosions and enemies.
I couldn't find anything on Amazon but books co-written with others, except for audio books that came much later! The original idea for SG1 came from the movie Stargate (1994). Even if both shows were written in the same year there would have been a law- suit in the works by one or the other for copyright infringement, don't you think? But I'll have to leave it there. I'm not very good at research!Funny, the Area 51 books that I have had soft-cover publication dates from 1997 to 2004. I know he wrote 4 more books later on, so maybe that's what you are thinking of?
I agree. Isaac Asimov is probably the most popular sci fi writer in that type of category.@Rose65 If you like books with sentient robots, Isaac Asimov would be the one to look up. I loved his books. And I will look up your novel. Sounds great!
This will sound very oxymoronic but I like the realistic sci fi. The really low budget sci fi that’s more horror than sci fi, I really dislike.
Thank you. I’ll check it out.Have you watched the series "Orphan Black" at all? Some people overlook it, since it is primarily focused on biotechnology and not space travel. Excellent series, and I see that a sequel series is expected in a year:
I think the new main character required a new actress but I suspect that it is the same character... or a "sister." Unlike the old show, this one appears to be in the future "for reasons."
That's the reason I love Arthur C. Clarke's SciFi works...he has a ton of non-fiction as well.This will sound very oxymoronic but I like the realistic sci fi.
Another good writer for those who love "realistic" science fiction is Jack McDevitt, especially his book Moonfall (not what the recent movie was based on; his book is very good).That's the reason I love Arthur C. Clarke's SciFi works...he has a ton of non-fiction as well.
If you like his stuff that's great. I never considered it science fiction myself. I'd put him in the camp with Ray Bradbury and Frank Herbert as essentially a fantasy author who cranked out boilerplate with science fictiony trappings. Almost the sort of thing an AI can generate today.Ellison's 1966 "Introduction" to "The Jigsaw Man" in Dangerous Visions noted that Niven "writes what is called 'hard' science fiction—i.e., his scientific extrapolation is based solidly in what is known at the date of his writing." In October, 1967, Algis Budrys observed that "Clarke, educated and intelligent, is supposed to be one of the big guns in 'hard' science fiction.... he is in fact the author of a clutch of mystical novels and only one or two 'hard' ones."
Arthur C. Clarke has many honors, awards and recognition, of course there's bound to be some detractors when one is world renowned.I never cared for Clarke, and I agreed with his critics of the time:
If you like his stuff that's great. I never considered it science fiction myself. I'd put him in the camp with Ray Bradbury and Frank Herbert as essentially a fantasy author who cranked out boilerplate with science fictiony trappings. Almost the sort of thing an AI can generate today.
But those are old and very tired debates now.