Science Fiction: Difference between revisions
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| style="text-align: center;"|Slaughterhouse Five | | style="text-align: center;"|Slaughterhouse Five | ||
| style="text-align: center;"|Vonnegut Jr., Kurt | | style="text-align: center;"|Vonnegut Jr., Kurt | ||
| | |A soldier with a time-travel problem survives a bombing, is abducted by aliens, and has a fat wife that he doesn't really care about. Makes you think a little about time and free will. | ||
| style="text-align: center;"|288 | | style="text-align: center;"|288 | ||
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| style="text-align: center;"|Altered Carbon | | style="text-align: center;"|Altered Carbon | ||
| style="text-align: center;"|Richard K. Morgan | | style="text-align: center;"|Richard K. Morgan | ||
| | |Planets are colonized and people's minds are digital. Intelligent soldier-turned-criminal is bailed out of mental prison and sent to Earth to investigate a murder. Of course, there are those who don't like him investigating. | ||
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| style="text-align: center;"|1984 | | style="text-align: center;"|1984 | ||
| style="text-align: center;"|George Orwell | | style="text-align: center;"|George Orwell | ||
| | |Where actions, words, and even thoughts are regulated by a small aristocracy, a man begins to rebel against the enforced social norms. Rather long but a classic dystopian novel. | ||
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| style="text-align: center;"|Fahrenheit 451 | | style="text-align: center;"|Fahrenheit 451 | ||
| style="text-align: center;"|Ray Bradbury | | style="text-align: center;"|Ray Bradbury | ||
| | |Firemen don't put out fires anymore, they start them to burn books since all books are now illegal. A few shocking events begin to make a fireman question why he does what he does and why his society is like it is. | ||
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| style="text-align: center;"|Logan's Run | | style="text-align: center;"|Logan's Run | ||
| style="text-align: center;"|William F. Nolan & George Clayton Johnson | | style="text-align: center;"|William F. Nolan & George Clayton Johnson | ||
| | |A twenty-year-old, living in a future-Earth that calls for euthanasia of people at or over twenty-one, hunts down people who, instead, run. Then, when he turns twenty-one, he runs too. | ||
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Revision as of 20:18, 27 October 2013
This page is meant to cover the basics works and stellar pieces of science fiction literature. While the bulk of Science Fiction is trashy genre-work there are genuine masterpieces. The purpose of this article is to illustrate those masterpieces as best as possible. As always however, this list is imperfect and always growing. If there is anything missing please add to it.
The Big Three
Isaac Asimov
Arthur C. Clarke
Robert Heinlein
Early and Proto Science Fiction
Golden Age Science Fiction
Modern Science Fiction
| Title | Author | Description | Pages | Book Cover |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| A Fire Upon the Deep | Vinge, Vernor | Three tiers of galactic civilisation face a common threat from a malicious, sentient super-AI. Hard to describe. Basically a must read. Sequels not that great. | 624 | |
| A Time of Changes | Silverberg, Robert | 304 | ||
| The Algebraist | Banks, Iain M. | Guy looks for secret formula to unlock wormhole travel in a varied and imaginitive universe. | 434 | |
| Babel-17 | Delany, Samuel R. | 158 | ||
| Behold the Man | Moorcock, Michael | 124 | ||
| Beyond Apollo | Malzberg, Barry N. | 156 | ||
| Bill, the Galactic Hero | Harrison, Harry | Anti-War Military Satire | 208 | |
| Blood Music | Bear, Greg | Hard science-fiction microbiology about a strange microorganism that a guy creates and willingly infects himself with. | 294 | |
| Camouflage | Haldeman, Joe | 304 | ||
| Consider Phlebas | Banks, Iain M. | 544 | ||
| Cryptonomicon | Stephenson, Neal | 1168 | ||
| Darwin's Radio | Bear, Greg | Hard science-fiction. Hard to get into if you don't know anything about molecular biology, but this makes it awesome. Retrovirus based disease changes the genetic code of sex cells in women. | 544 | |
| The Dispossessed | Le Guin, Ursula K. | 400 | ||
| Doomsday Book | Willis, Connie | 592 | ||
| Downbelow Station | Cherryh, C.J. | 352 | ||
| Dune | Hebert, Frank | Fueding families fight over a precious resource that is only avaliable on a single planet. This resource, spice, is essential to galactic civilisation. Spice must flow. Classic. | 544 | |
| Dying Inside | Silverberg, Robert | 304 | ||
| Ender's Game | Card, Orson Scott | Young boy selected for military service to fight off an invading force of alien ant like creatures. Must read. | 352 | |
| The Faded Sun Trilogy | Cherryh, C.J. | 784 | ||
| Fire time | Anderson, Poul | 288 | ||
| Flowers for Algernon | Keyes, Daniel | 324 | ||
| Footfall | Niven, Larry & Pournelle, Jerry | 524 | ||
| The Forever War | Haldeman, Joe | Preachy anti-war vietnam era science fiction about an interesting facet of slower-than-lightspeed intergalactic warfare. | 384 | |
| The Forge of God | Bear, Greg | 480 | ||
| Gateway | Pohl, Frederik | An abandoned alien space station is discovered that contains many capsules that go to random locations in the galaxy. | 288 | |
| Halcyon Drift | Stableford, Brian | 175 | ||
| The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy | Adams, Douglas | 272 | ||
| Hyperion | Simmons, Dan | A group of people are drawn to a planet, which links them all together. Heavy on the backstory. | 481 | |
| I Have No Mouth and I Must Scream | Ellison, Harlan | I have no words and I must describe. | 20 | |
| Ilium | Simmons, Dan | 752 | ||
| The Illuminatus! Trilogy | Shea, Robert & Wilson, Robert Anton | 805 | ||
| Kiln People | Brin, David | 336 | ||
| The Left Hand of Darkness | Le Guin, Ursula K. | 320 | ||
| Lord Valentine's Castle | Silverberg, Robert | 528 | ||
| Lord of Light | Zelazny, Roger | 304 | ||
| Make Room! Make Room! | Harry Harrison | Soylent was neither green nor made of people in this book, which is quite a bit different (better) than the movie it spawned. This story is basically a murder mystery set in an overpopulated world. The tone of the novel paints a slightly goofy (but always sympathetic) portrait of humanity. | ||
| Man Plus | Pohl, Frederik | Superhuman project for mars colonisation. | 320 | |
| The Man Who Melted | Dann, Jack | 274 | ||
| The Man Who Folded Himself | Gerrold, David | Ever wondered what would happen if you abused the everloving shit out of time travel? | 144 | |
| Mote in God's Eye | Niven, Larry & Pournelle, Jerry | Mankind discovers alien race with an extremely different method of using resources. | 592 | |
| Moving Mars | Bear, Greg | Something about rebellious students making a big fuss about losing their freedoms or some shit. | 448 | |
| Old Man's War | Scalzi, John | 320 | ||
| The Peace War | Vinge, Vernor | Post-war. A war that was ended thanks to the invention of an encapsulating technology, and now the populace lead a life monitored by an anti-technology faction. | 304 | |
| Rainbow's End | Vinge, Vernor | Cyber-space avatar worlds clash with a real world developing increasingly deadly bioweapons. | 368 | |
| Raft | Baxter, Stephen | Book 1 in the engaging "Xeelee sequence". A creative world where the laws of the universe are different, and life prevails. | 264 | |
| Red Mars | Robinson, Kim Stanley | 592 | ||
| Revelation Space | Reynolds, Alistair | 576 | ||
| Ringworld | Niven, Larry | Trip to the ringworld. | 352 | |
| Rite of Passage | Panshin, Alexei | 260 | ||
| River of Gods | McDonald, Ian | 599 | ||
| Singularity Sky | Stross, Charles | 352 | ||
| Slaughterhouse Five | Vonnegut Jr., Kurt | A soldier with a time-travel problem survives a bombing, is abducted by aliens, and has a fat wife that he doesn't really care about. Makes you think a little about time and free will. | 288 | |
| The Snow Queen | Vinge, Joan D. | 448 | ||
| Solaris | Lem, Stanislaw | 204 | ||
| The Sparrow | Russell, Mary Doria | 408 | ||
| Spin | Wilson, Robert Charles | 464 | ||
| Sundiver | Brin, David | Stars + explorers = sundivers. | 352 | |
| Tau Zero | Anderson, Poul | 190 | ||
| Think Like a Dinosaur and Other Stories | Kelley, James Patrick | 275 | ||
| This Immortal / ...And Call Me Conrad | Zelazny, Roger | 176 | ||
| Timescape | Benford, Gregory | 512 | ||
| The Time Ships | Baxter, Stephen | Time travel. Time machines powered by flubber or kryptonite or something travel into massively distant futures. | 544 | |
| Troika | Chapman, Stepan | 256 | ||
| Ubik | Dick, Philip K. | 224 | ||
| Vurt | Noon, Jeff | 342 | ||
| World of Ptavvs | Niven, Larry | 192 |
Cyberpunk
| Title | Author | Description | Book Cover |
|---|---|---|---|
| Accelerando | Charles Stross | ||
| Altered Carbon | Richard K. Morgan | Planets are colonized and people's minds are digital. Intelligent soldier-turned-criminal is bailed out of mental prison and sent to Earth to investigate a murder. Of course, there are those who don't like him investigating. | |
| The Diamond Age | Neal Stephenson | ||
| Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep | Philip K. Dick | ||
| Islands in the Net | Bruce Sterling | ||
| Neuromancer | William Gibson | ||
| Permutation City | Greg Egan | ||
| The Shockwave Rider | John Brunner | ||
| Snow Crash | Neal Stephenson | ||
| Software | Rudy Rucker |
Post Apocalyptic
| Title | Author | Description | Book Cover |
|---|---|---|---|
| A Canticle for Leibowitz | Walter M. Miller, Jr. | ||
| A Wrinkle in Time | Madeleine L'Engle | ||
| The Chrysalids | John Wyndam | ||
| Cloud Atlas | David Mitchell | ||
| The Deep | John Crowley | ||
| Dies the Fire | S.M. Sterline | ||
| Dr. Bloodmoney | Philip K. Dick | ||
| Dreamsnake | Vonda M. McIntyre | ||
| The Dying Earth | Jack Vance | ||
| Earth Abides | George R. Stewart | ||
| The Elfin Ship | James Blaylock | ||
| I Am Legend | Richard Matheson | ||
| Lucifer's Hammer | Larry Niven & Jerry Pournelle | ||
| The Mount | Carol Emshwiller | ||
| The Nightland | William Hope Hodgson | ||
| The Planet of the Apes | Pierre Boulle | ||
| The Postman | David Brin | ||
| Ravage | Rene Barjavel | ||
| Riddley Walker | Russell Hoban | ||
| The Road | Cormac McCarthy | ||
| Shadow and Claw | Gene Wolfe | ||
| The Sheep Look Up | John Brunner | ||
| The Tripods Trilogy | Samuel Youd |
Dystopian
| Title | Author | Description | Book Cover |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1984 | George Orwell | Where actions, words, and even thoughts are regulated by a small aristocracy, a man begins to rebel against the enforced social norms. Rather long but a classic dystopian novel. | |
| A Scanner Darkly | Philip K. Dick | ||
| Brave New World | Aldous Huxley | ||
| Fahrenheit 451 | Ray Bradbury | Firemen don't put out fires anymore, they start them to burn books since all books are now illegal. A few shocking events begin to make a fireman question why he does what he does and why his society is like it is. | |
| Flow My Tears, The Policeman Said | Philip K. Dick | ||
| The Giver | Lois Lowry | ||
| The Handmaid's Tale | Margaret Atwood | ||
| Logan's Run | William F. Nolan & George Clayton Johnson | A twenty-year-old, living in a future-Earth that calls for euthanasia of people at or over twenty-one, hunts down people who, instead, run. Then, when he turns twenty-one, he runs too. | |
| The Man in the High Castle | Philip K. Dick | ||
| Stand on Zanzibar | John Brunner | ||
| We | Yevgeny Zamyatin | ||
| Where Late the Sweet Birds Sang | Kate Wilhelm | ||
| The World Inside | Robert Silverberg | ||
| This Perfect Day | Ira Levin |















































