[TheForge] cryptonomocon YAK

Steve Smith sos at alum.mit.edu
Mon Oct 4 18:03:54 EDT 2004


Thanks for the book suggestions Ries. I'll take a look at them.

For some reason still unknown to me, I read Mieville's Perdido Street 
Station all the way through. I haven't had such a negative reaction to a 
book in a long time. Not just the fact that his world is disgusting, but 
it just doesn't make any sense, either as science fiction or fantasy. 
Viewer disgression advised.

Steve


Ries Niemi wrote:

> 
> On Saturday, October 2, 2004, at 09:08 AM, Schade wrote:
> 
>> Mike Spencer and others,
>>
>> Thanks for the comments on Cryptonomicon. I am almost
>> halfway thru and enjoying the hell out of it. I'll probably try some
>> of Stephensons other books (Snow Crash?) when I'm done with
>> Crypto. Any other book ideas would be welcome.
>>
>> Bob
>>
>>
> 
> Bob- both Snow Crash and Diamond age are great. They are a little more 
> scifi than cryptonomicon, but have the same very clever touch.
> 
> Other authors I really recomend, forgive me if you already know some of 
> these, but I think these are some of the best speculative fiction in the 
> last 15 years or so:
> 
>  Iain Banks- englishman who has written a series of books about a future 
> society called the culture-
> Use of Weapons, or Excession, or The Player of Games-  but really 
> anything he writes is all very good. Against a Dark Background is 
> another amazing one of his.
> 
> If you havent read any Bruce Sterling- I would recommend reading Heavy 
> Weather- great book about chasing tornadoes in the future.
> 
> Absolutely essential is the William Gibson trilogy- Neuromancer, Count 
> Zero, and Mona Lisa Overdrive. He started it all- practically invented a 
> lot of concepts that all science fiction writers use, as well as many 
> that have soaked into the culture in general.
> 
> And Gibson and Sterling collaborated on another book about the fictional 
> history of computers- the Difference Engine.
> 
> Then there are two really great books by Vernor Vinge- Deepness in the 
> Sky, and Fire upon the Deep- both really clever and engaging.
> 
> Neil Gaiman, who is better known for his dark adult comic books, has 
> written some excellent fantastic fiction-
> start with Neverwhere- it will knock your socks off. Then try American 
> Gods.
> 
> Another real uncategorizable author is China Mieville- his first book, 
> King Rat, is a retelling of the Pied Piper story in modern day london- 
> and his next one, Perdido Street Station, is indescribable, but amazing.
> 
> Phillip Pullman wrote a trilogy ostensibly for teens that is killer- The 
> Golden Compass, The Subtle Knife, and The Amber Spyglass
> 
> Then there is the australian author Sean McMullen
> who wrote a great series of books about an almost medieval post 
> industrial civilisation. Start with Souls in the Great Machine, about a 
> human powered caluculator.
> 
> 
> Ken Macleod is a scottish socialist modern author who writes great 
> science fiction- anything by him is interesting, but start at the 
> beginning wit   htheCassiniDivision.
> 
> 
> I got lots more, but this ought to keep you going for a while.
> 
> ries
> 
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