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Recommend me Science Fiction
 

offline Zephyr Twin from ΔΔΔ on 2010-03-23 17:53 [#02373130]
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Hi, I've recently taken a deep interest in science fiction
that is more science than fiction. I'm particularly
interested in interstellar travel and space colonization,
but am open to just about any setting or subject matter.
Ultimately I'm hoping to find great stories that are
grounded more in science than fantasy, and I would
appreciate any suggestions you might have. Thanks!


 

offline J198 from Maastricht (Netherlands, The) on 2010-03-23 17:58 [#02373132]
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i might be mentioning the obvious here, but just in case:

movie: contact (based on the novel by Carl Sagan).

i'll try to think of more. are you looking for books, films,
documentaries?


 

offline Indeksical from Phobiazero Damage Control (United Kingdom) on 2010-03-23 18:28 [#02373135]
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Futurama.


 

offline Zephyr Twin from ΔΔΔ on 2010-03-23 18:33 [#02373138]
Points: 16982 Status: Regular | Followup to J198: #02373132 | Show recordbag



I loved Contact the film and will definitely seek out the
book. I'm mainly looking for novels or short stories that
are written by people who know enough about physics and
astronomy to make the science aspect of "scifi" believable
and grounded at least slightly in reality. Thanks for the
suggestion. :]



 

offline larn from PLANET E (United Kingdom) on 2010-03-23 18:35 [#02373139]
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another obvious one, Arthur C Clarke


 

offline RussellDust on 2010-03-23 18:37 [#02373140]
Points: 15924 Status: Regular



The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy for the fun side.


 

offline larn from PLANET E (United Kingdom) on 2010-03-23 18:37 [#02373142]
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Isaac Asimov, Robert A. Heinlein


 

offline Guybrush from the white room on 2010-03-23 18:39 [#02373143]
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The Jetsons


 

offline Zephyr Twin from ΔΔΔ on 2010-03-23 18:40 [#02373144]
Points: 16982 Status: Regular | Followup to RussellDust: #02373140 | Show recordbag



I've already read all 6 parts of that, but I suppose I could
always read it again. :)

Thanks for the suggestions guys! I'm going to the bookstore
this weekend and it will be good to have a list of options
to shop around for.


 

offline Steinvordhosbn from London (United Kingdom) on 2010-03-23 18:45 [#02373146]
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Iain M Banks, "Consider Phlebus", "The Algebraist" "Use of
Weapons" - how much it's rooted on Science FACT I don't know
but it's so detailed and epic in scope as to Make Its Own
Physics


 

offline Indeksical from Phobiazero Damage Control (United Kingdom) on 2010-03-23 18:45 [#02373147]
Points: 10671 Status: Regular | Followup to Steinvordhosbn: #02373146 | Show recordbag



This is an excellent recommendation.


 

offline Zephyr Twin from ΔΔΔ on 2010-03-23 18:57 [#02373148]
Points: 16982 Status: Regular | Followup to Steinvordhosbn: #02373146 | Show recordbag



As per usual, you've hit the nail on the head. I'm really
not bothered by liberties taken with scientific reality as
long as the end result is enjoyable. Thanks for the
recommendation.


 

offline retape from http://retape.net (Norway) on 2010-03-23 19:07 [#02373149]
Points: 2355 Status: Lurker



star wars novels

actually, no


 

offline gingaling from Scamworth (Burkina Faso) on 2010-03-23 19:13 [#02373151]
Points: 2281 Status: Lurker



bio dome


 

offline JivverDicker from my house on 2010-03-23 19:16 [#02373153]
Points: 12102 Status: Regular | Followup to Steinvordhosbn: #02373146



Slightly on topic did you see that John Hicklenton died, I
used to love his scratchy, sketchy style in 2000AD.


 

offline Zephyr Twin from ΔΔΔ on 2010-03-23 19:18 [#02373154]
Points: 16982 Status: Regular | Followup to retape: #02373149 | Show recordbag



Lol. my last past should read "enjoyable and
believable"

I do quite like the original starwars film, though.


 

offline J198 from Maastricht (Netherlands, The) on 2010-03-23 19:28 [#02373155]
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this book is both a fun read as well as a good
source of information on the use and abuse of biotechnology
today and in the near future. It has nothing to do with
space exploration though.

this book is written by a physicist and mostly
deals with simplified and illustrated examples of how
(space)time works, what wormholes and black holes are and
how we might be able to exploit them, while also pondering
ideas brought forth in various sci-fi books and films.



 

offline Steinvordhosbn from London (United Kingdom) on 2010-03-23 19:41 [#02373161]
Points: 3185 Status: Regular | Followup to JivverDicker: #02373153 | Show recordbag



No... ahhh, damn it. Nemesis...


 

offline Guybrush from the white room on 2010-03-23 19:50 [#02373166]
Points: 2556 Status: Lurker | Followup to Zephyr Twin: #02373154 | Show recordbag



watch flight of the navigator. i'm not kidding.


 

offline pantalaimon from Winterfell (United Kingdom) on 2010-03-23 19:53 [#02373167]
Points: 7090 Status: Lurker | Followup to Steinvordhosbn: #02373146 | Show recordbag



seconded although Use of Weapons is probably not the best
place to start, its the only book of his i've struggled
with, reading it now and hoping it will be worth the hard
work.

i'd also recommend Peter F Hamilton, his Void trilogy is the
best of his work i have read.

Dune goes without saying.


 

offline ICASEA on 2010-03-23 19:57 [#02373171]
Points: 21 Status: Lurker



philip K Dick


 

offline Zephyr Twin from ΔΔΔ on 2010-03-23 20:30 [#02373175]
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I've seen it a long time ago in a galaxy far far away.


 

offline Steinvordhosbn from London (United Kingdom) on 2010-03-23 21:09 [#02373187]
Points: 3185 Status: Regular | Followup to pantalaimon: #02373167 | Show recordbag



Oh stick with "Use of Weapons", I'm not vaguely going to
hint at what happens in the story as I'd love to be able to
read it again not knowing.


 

offline Steinvordhosbn from London (United Kingdom) on 2010-03-23 21:17 [#02373188]
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The only books of his I struggled with was the semi-culture
sci fi "Inversions" (I did give up) and "Complicity" (I gave
up). I like "The Business" and "Song of Stone" which aren't
considered his best, and I did manage to get through "The
Steep Approach to Garbadale" even though it was a pretty
inconsequential story with some agreeable Scottish scenery.
"The Algebraist" took commitment but was well worth sticking
with, a non more epic sci-fi epic with a great trick
of pulling back to reveal even wider widescreened
epicicity


 

offline Zephyr Twin from ΔΔΔ on 2010-03-23 23:34 [#02373210]
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I decided to go down to the bookstore tonight to check out
their prices, which were considerably higher than
amazon.com, so I'll be getting most of my books online. I
did get "Consider Phlebus" as they had it for a fair price.
Will start that as soon as I finish the book I'm reading
now.

Thanks again for the recommendations, everyone. And feel
free to offer more!


 

offline darkpromenade from Australia on 2010-03-23 23:49 [#02373212]
Points: 2777 Status: Regular



Kim Stanley Robinson - Mars Trilogy



 

offline darkpromenade from Australia on 2010-03-23 23:51 [#02373213]
Points: 2777 Status: Regular | Followup to JivverDicker: #02373153



I remember being shocked when I first saw his work.


 

offline Zephyr Twin from ΔΔΔ on 2010-03-24 00:22 [#02373215]
Points: 16982 Status: Regular | Followup to darkpromenade: #02373212 | Show recordbag



I've actually got all three of those, somewhere. I was given
the set as a gift and never got around to finishing it. Will
have to try to dig them up.


 

offline Taxidermist from Black Grass on 2010-03-24 00:29 [#02373216]
Points: 9958 Status: Lurker



The Dune series is fantastic, but not entirely scientific.
Almost more fantasy than science fiction.

Snow crash and The Diamond Age by Neil Stephenson are both
pretty good, and they seem to be hitting the nail on the
head with some of the technology that is becoming
commonplace.

The Age of the Spiritual Machine by Ray Kurzweil isn't
necessarily fiction, but it seems to fit your criteria, and
its pretty good too.



 

offline Zephyr Twin from ΔΔΔ on 2010-03-24 00:36 [#02373217]
Points: 16982 Status: Regular | Followup to Taxidermist: #02373216 | Show recordbag



Thanks Taxi, will check your recommendations out.


 

offline PS on 2010-03-24 05:20 [#02373270]
Points: 1876 Status: Lurker



For you, Zephyr, my friend, a trip to Gandahar is a must.
All you need is a lazy link and you'll be on your way!

LAZY_TITLE


 

offline ijonspeches from 109P/Swift-Tuttle on 2010-03-24 11:33 [#02373286]
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might wanna check alastair reynolds too.
hes been working for the european space agency before
he wrote his novels. his use of advanced technology is quite
sensible and adds a lot to the stories. if you seek
exploration you should start with "revelation space".


 

offline Chihiro from twins land on 2010-03-24 11:56 [#02373289]
Points: 4650 Status: Regular



Blade Runner


 

offline -crazone from smashing acid over and over on 2010-03-24 12:29 [#02373296]
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alien 1/2/3
Species


 

offline Barcode from United Kingdom on 2010-03-24 12:32 [#02373299]
Points: 1767 Status: Lurker



free willy


 

offline ijonspeches from 109P/Swift-Tuttle on 2010-03-24 12:49 [#02373300]
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seconded
blade runner is a great one with excellent photography



 

offline ijonspeches from 109P/Swift-Tuttle on 2010-03-24 12:51 [#02373301]
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not to forget the soundtrack


 

offline nightex from Šiauliai (Lithuania) on 2010-03-24 13:47 [#02373306]
Points: 1275 Status: Lurker



Star trek the next generation
Lexx
Babylon 5


 

offline -crazone from smashing acid over and over on 2010-03-24 15:30 [#02373326]
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lol..

sound of music


 

offline kurrrak from Bialystok (Poland) on 2010-03-24 15:50 [#02373327]
Points: 1264 Status: Lurker



Lol, such poor recommendations according to your interests.
Except Reynolds, he's a killer. I've read almost everything
by him.


 

offline atwood from The Library (United Kingdom) on 2010-03-24 16:23 [#02373330]
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Is that an offer?


 

offline Barcode from United Kingdom on 2010-03-24 16:44 [#02373336]
Points: 1767 Status: Lurker | Followup to atwood: #02373330



no. that would be big willy.


 

offline hexane on 2010-03-24 17:48 [#02373353]
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Wow, Gandahar! Thanks a bunch for posting that...


 

offline atwood from The Library (United Kingdom) on 2010-03-24 17:53 [#02373354]
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:D


 

offline Steinvordhosbn from London (United Kingdom) on 2010-03-24 19:06 [#02373363]
Points: 3185 Status: Regular | Followup to kurrrak: #02373327 | Show recordbag



If I thought Zephyr was after your mum's Quantum Leap fan
fiction written in minge ink I'd have linked to her blog.


 

offline Suspiria from Australia on 2010-03-24 21:54 [#02373394]
Points: 2 Status: Lurker



Pattern Recognition or Neuromancer by William Gibson, its
more cyberpunk than scifi tho


 

offline J198 from Maastricht (Netherlands, The) on 2010-03-24 23:42 [#02373406]
Points: 7342 Status: Lurker | Followup to Zephyr Twin: #02373130 | Show recordbag



yo. this is very off topic but are you zeph triplet on
soulseek?


 

offline Zephyr Twin from ΔΔΔ on 2010-03-25 00:21 [#02373416]
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Hey man. I'm Zeph Triplet on Sound cloud and Zephtinwulf on
slsk. :]


 

offline mohamed from the turtle business on 2010-03-25 00:36 [#02373425]
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i'm passing this, still have to see all the movies of the
last reccommendation round

and half of the cosmos series from the last year


 

offline Zephyr Twin from ΔΔΔ on 2010-03-25 00:41 [#02373430]
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Ohh and that's a bad miss! :]


 


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