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STAR HERO Reading List


Steve Long

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Re: STAR HERO Reading List

 

Just finished "absolution gap", the third book in the revelation space trilogy.

 

Remember how terminator was great, terminator 2 was better and terminator 3 sucked? Also how superman 1 and 2 were greatr then superman 3 was a steaming pile of celluloid excrement?

 

Well, sad to say but the revelation space trilogy followed the same pattern. Revelation space=Aewsome. Redemption ark=Awesomer. Absolution gap=drek.

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  • 5 weeks later...

Re: STAR HERO Reading List

 

I've been gradually inputting my library into a book database, and if it's not too late to add some books to the list, I have some suggestions (name links go to Wikipedia, most story/book links go to the ISFDB, for assistance in tracking them down):

 

 

  • Keith Laumer: I'm surprised and saddened not to see him on the list. He wrote lots of great sci-fi stuff in the 60s, and is responsible to two great (and antithetical) series, Retief (light-hearted social sci-fi about an interstellar diplomat) and Bolos(military sci-fi about gigantic autonomous robot tanks). If you end up having copious free time, A Plague of Demons (a protagonist given super human powers by surgery battling against alien dog-creatures and their apparently "human" allies) is probably also worth checking out, as is the The Ultimax Man (similar to the above). He also did a universe-hopping series worth checking out called Imperium, but that's probably a different genre book. In all cases, his earlier stuff is better -- around 1971 he suffered a stroke and, while he continued to write, he was a different author afterwards. The Retief stories in particular suffer.
  • Laurence Manning: He wrote only a few stories, including The Man Who Awoke. If you manage to catch this one, it's a great example of 30s sci-fi, about a protagonist who figures out how to sleep away ages of time. Awakening every 5000 years, he tries to find out how it will all end. Very interesting example of some ttanshumanist thought from the dawn of Science Fiction.
  • Ursula K. Le Guin: Kind of surprised not to see her there, though admittedly much of her sci-fi is heavily fantasy-tinged and pretty much defines "soft sci-fi." Nevertheless, her Hainish cycle is worth checking out, containing unrelated stories set in the same universe. The Left Hand of Darkness is one of those, and regularly makes "Top 100 Sci-Fi Novel" lists. While I don't care for some of her work, Rocannon's World (or even the short story on which it is based, "The Dowry of Angyar"/"Semley's Necklace") is an excellent display of the effect of high-tech space-faring people can have on a low-tech native culture.
  • Charles Sheffield: While he wrote a lot of excellent short stories that I can't find collected in one place, his Heritage Universe novels are worth checking out. Essentially, while they're somewhat repetitive, they are also excellent examples of the "Long-Vanished Ancient Technological Race" concept.

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  • 1 month later...

Re: STAR HERO Reading List

 

*warning pet Peeve*

 

Home Owners Insurance.

 

The Original Star Hero Stated Hovercraft do not exist.

 

My Home Owners Insurance specifically states it Will Not Cover Hovercraft. If Allstate Insurance thinks Hovercraft exist to the point where they wont cover it in case of damage to a home then yes, Hovercraft really do exist.

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  • 2 weeks later...

Re: STAR HERO Reading List

 

Not sure if these were mentioned: Scalzi' date=' John -- "Old Man's War" (a trilogy, so far, I believe). Hmm, if you have NOOK perhaps I can "Lend" it to you.[/quote']

 

Next month (or maybe it's in May, I've forgotten) Scalzi's "reboot" of Piper's classic Little Fuzzy setting will be on the shelves.

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  • 2 weeks later...

Re: STAR HERO Reading List

 

I'm done, or nearly so, with my Star Hero reading, so I'm un-stickying this thread. Much thanks to everyone who offered suggestions on books to read! Predictably I haven't been able to get to nearly as many books as I'd like, but thanks to your advice I've come across a few enjoyable novels I'd otherwise have missed. :)

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