Best science fiction- your suggestions

In summary, these books are based on a firm/possible "scientific" basis, and are visionary and close to home.
  • #1
Hercule Poirot
31
1
science fiction books that you think are worthwhile for a reading list? What of these books are based on a firm/possible "scientific" basis (kind of visionary science if you would like)
 
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  • #2
Asimov's Foundation Saga
 
  • #3
This might not be quite what you were looking for, but it's science, and visionary, and quite "close to home".

Buzz Aldrin (the astronaut) wrote a book called 'Encounter with Tiber'. It is set in a near future where Mankind discovers evidence of an alien visitation on Mars.

The book exploits Aldrin's carefully thought-through vision of a fuel/time efficient system of orbital transfer between Earth and Mars (or any other orbiting body such as the Moon). It uses a sort of looping bus schedule-like arrangment as a way of economically exploring the solar system using available technology. The book is a vehicle for demonstrating the system (though it is still a legitimate work of fiction).



Kim Stanley Robinson wrote 'Red Mars' (and three sequels) which explores beanstalks (or space elevators, or skyhooks, but personally I've always preferred 'beanstalks').
 
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  • #4
danne89 said:
Asimov's Foundation Saga

Lash me with a wet noodle, I could not stand Foundation. Never even got through the first book.
 
  • #5
Asimov and Douglas Adams are my preferred sci-fi authors...but I'm hardly a sci-fi-guy.

<<lashing Dave with wet noodle>>
 
  • #6
Most anything by Larry Niven and Jerry Pournelle is good reading and good science fiction. Niven's Ringworld is a classic.

EDIT:

Note that Billy T is pushing his own book. Because it is offered as a free d/l it did not delete the message as spam. It is still questionable whether it is either decent reading or science.
 
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  • #7
Integral said:
Most anything by Larry Niven and Jerry Pournelle is good reading and good science fiction. Niven's Ringworld is a classic.

Well, that goes without saying. (Waitaminnit there's a thread for that too!)

Niven is my fave author. I have every book.

But I understood the poster to be interested specifically in books that dwelt on a "firm/possible 'scientific' basis".

While Niven definitely puts a lot of Math behind his works, he does make 'leaps of magic' - indestructible materials, hyperdrives, etc. I can't speak for Pournelle, since I've only read him as collaborations.
 
  • #8
Vernor Vinge's A Deepness in the Sky.

Ken MacLeod's future Trot series "The Fall Revolution" comprising The Star Fraction, The Stone Canal, The Cassini Division, and The Sky Road.
 
  • #9
DaveC426913 said:
Well, that goes without saying. (Waitaminnit there's a thread for that too!)

Niven is my fave author. I have every book.

But I understood the poster to be interested specifically in books that dwelt on a "firm/possible 'scientific' basis".

While Niven definitely puts a lot of Math behind his works, he does make 'leaps of magic' - indestructible materials, hyperdrives, etc. I can't speak for Pournelle, since I've only read him as collaborations.
Of course Niven makes some leaps, you have to to get space travel. The question is how many leaps are taken and how are the effects of the leaps dealt with. To me that is good science fiction, it is necessary to break some laws, that is the fiction, how breaking the laws of physics is dealt with is the science.
 
  • #10
Integral said:
Niven's Ringworld is a classic.

That is one of my all time favorites. That and Childhood's End, by Clarke.
 
  • #11
I would say avoid the field altogether, don't waste your time on it, and concentrate on science non-fiction. Much more interesting, imaginative, and mind-bending. But if you must, then have a look at some of the works of Stanislaw Lem, who is much funnier than Douglas Adams, and philosophically deeper than any other author of the genre. Also, if you like physics, then Greg Egan may be worth your while, although his writing is ordinary.
 
  • #12
You might want to try Hal Clement.
 
  • #13
I would like to thank all of those who contributed to this thread, the information above gave me some prespective into the world of science fiction

what I meant by scientific basis is the use of theories/hypothesis proposed by physicits or cosmologists (especially in the recent decades) in science fiction writing. Since many of these seem to be contrary to commen sense and every day experience (at least to lay persons), I have thought that it would make good sci fi.

When it comes to respected scientists who have wrote science fiction, I know of Carl Sagan (Author of Contact). There might be others, but I haven't heard of yet.
 
  • #14
A couple of Clarke novels can raise those little hairs on the back of my neck. [Disclosure: these days it's also those little hairs all over my shoulders.] That happens when I get to the Star Gate part of 2001, and also in Rendevous with Rama when the human explorers encounter a seemingly-alive thing inside the gigantic extraterrestrial spacecraft known as 'Rama.'
 
  • #15
Hercule Poirot said:
\what I meant by scientific basis is the use of theories/hypothesis proposed by physicits or cosmologists (especially in the recent decades) in science fiction writing.

Well, then Greg Egan is definitely your man. No other science fiction author comes close to the advanced level of physics/cosmology he directly deals with in his fiction.
 
  • #16
cragwolf said:
Well, then Greg Egan is definitely your man. No other science fiction author comes close to the advanced level of physics/cosmology he directly deals with in his fiction.

Oh my, yes! Schild's Ladder is my most favorite sf novel of recent years! Just to forestall a misunderstanding the last time I posted about it, Schild was(is) a real person. He devised his Ladder, a geometrical construction, to solve the problem of moving a vector parallel to itself through dynamically curved spacetime. The construction is discussed in Misner, Thorne, and Wheeler's great text, Gravitation. Egan uses the construction as a metaphor for his characters' approach to keeping one's moral balance through a vastly extended lifespan that passes though widely varying ethical systems.
 
  • #17
Wow... I can't believe nobody's mentioned Robert Heinlein yet. He is simply the grand master of science fiction writers... so on point, so sharp... messages so timeless and meaningful... what great sci-fi should be.

Cheers...
 
  • #18
LunchBox said:
Wow... I can't believe nobody's mentioned Robert Heinlein yet. He is simply the grand master of science fiction writers... so on point, so sharp... messages so timeless and meaningful... what great sci-fi should be.

Cheers...

I read everything Heinlein wrote in my younger days, and grooved on it (or should I say "Grokked it"?) but I think he got rather self-indulgent in those big novels in his latter days. Getting to be a counter-cultural hero with Stranger in a Strange Land and then converting to a counter-culture villain with Starship Trooper seems to have fazed him.
 
  • #19
Lem, Philip K. Dick, Asimov, Card, Neal Stephenson, and, William Gibson are all guys I can recommend. Never really got into Stranger in a Strange Land by Heinlein.
 
  • #20
No one has mentioned Brian Aldiss' Helliconia yet, so I'll do that.
 
  • #21
No one seems to have noticed that Larry Niven really is a pervert! I liked his books, but he could have cut down on all the sex; it really just becomes absurd, even though he's trying to... I don't know... I guess I'm just one of the people who easily gets embarrassed.

I would recommend anything by Joanna Russ. She's one of few feministic science fiction writers and truly enjoyable. I also seem to recall that Robert Silverberg has written quite a few pieces that are really good. He also crosses the border into fantasy (the same realm of writing, really). Ursula K LeGuin is also a good writer, try "The Dispossessed" which is claimed to be her best book.

Otherwise, Neal Stephenson's SnowCrash is a good representative of the cyberpunk genre.

I just recently read a few short stories by Jeff VanderMeer that can be found on www.infinityplus.co.uk that are worth checking out. They've also got a large set of short stories put out on the web for anyone to read, which means basically there's always something for everyone.
 
  • #22
I agree with LuchBox, Heinlein has written quite a few really good books. The most famous and best according to me is "The Moon Is a Harsh Mistress". It's personal chemistry between the main character and the intellent super computer, who's leading the Lunar revolution, is absoultely fabulous.

Another book well worth reading is "Fahrenheit 451", in which the society burns all non-trivial information to make people happier.
 
  • #23
I've always liked L. Sprague De Camp, with Harold Shea it starts with The Incomplete Enchanter.
 
  • #24
Antyhing by Asimov, A.C. Clarke (though not the sequels to Rendezvous with Rama :yuck: which itself was a great book). Loved Douglass Adams. Stephen Baxter. And as far as can't believes, I can't believe no one has yet metioned Frank Herbert's classic Dune. Thats my two and a half cents.
 
  • #25
For Hard Sci-Fi, I would recommend the Mars tirlogy by Kim Stanley Robinson. The first, Red Mars is pretty feasible, and they get more far fetched through the trilogy.

Also Contact, by Carl Sagan. Much better than the movie, really gets into the religion/science discussion. One of my favorite books ever.


For sci-fi in general, Easton Press has a list of the 'best sci-fi of all time'. I haven't read them all, but here's the list with comments next to those I have read.

City - Simak
Flowers for Algernon - Keyes
More Than Human - Sturgeon
Stand on Zanzibar - Brunner
The Invisible Man - H. G. Wells
The War of the Worlds - H. G. Wells (I liked it, but didn't love it. Definitely a major milestone in sci-fi though, and worth reading)
The Left Hand of Darkness - LeGuin
The Disposessed - LeGuin (Really great book, and the main character is a physicist!)
Fahrenheit 451 - Bradbury (AWESOME book, very relevant to today's society)
Timescape - Benford
Dune - Herbert (A must read, really awesome book. A story with real depth to it.)
Slan - Van Vogt
Startide Rising - Brin
2001: A Space Odyssey - Clarke (Very good, very weird. I had to sit and think for a good long time when I finished it)
Speaker for the Dead - Card (Sequel to Ender's Game (also excellent). Has a different "feel" to it but is really good.)
The Gods Themselves - Asimov (The original quote is: "Against stupidity, the Gods themselves contend in vain." Good, but hard to describe. Aliens and alternate dimensions are involved.)
 
  • #26
I was pleased and startled to find that I have read all the books on that list. And my favorites? Dune (of course) and Timescape. Timescape is really a very fine NOVEL, aside from its excellent SF theme. The "problem" is a little out of date (a worldwide ecological collapse at the turn of the millenium). But you can just project the time of the novel into the future. Benford was one of the first physicsts to take tachyons seriously, and the novel contains a fictionalization of the "Tachyon telephone" tht he devised and had a resprectable scientific paper on.

BTW an excellent series by Benford is his "Center of the Galaxy" set of books, featuring the attractive Bishop family on the run from the overpowering machines. I see some of the books are being reprinted, but if you care about reading in sequence you have to look carefully; one of the last books is currently on the stands.. Your library would probably have the whole series.
 
  • #27

1. What makes a science fiction story the "best"?

There is no one definitive answer to this question as it is subjective and varies from person to person. However, some common elements that are often present in highly regarded science fiction include a well-developed and believable world or universe, thought-provoking ideas and themes, complex and relatable characters, and a compelling and unique plot.

2. Are there any classic science fiction books that you would recommend?

Some classic science fiction books that are often considered must-reads include "1984" by George Orwell, "Dune" by Frank Herbert, "Fahrenheit 451" by Ray Bradbury, "Foundation" by Isaac Asimov, and "The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy" by Douglas Adams.

3. How can I find new and lesser-known science fiction books?

There are a few ways to discover new and lesser-known science fiction books. You can browse book recommendation websites, join online book clubs or forums dedicated to science fiction, attend book fairs or conventions, ask for recommendations from friends or followers on social media, or check out lists and awards for upcoming or underrated science fiction books.

4. Is there a difference between science fiction and fantasy?

While both genres involve elements that are not necessarily based in reality, the main difference between science fiction and fantasy is that science fiction is based on scientific and technological advancements while fantasy is based on magic and supernatural elements. Additionally, science fiction often explores the consequences and impact of these advancements on society, while fantasy tends to focus more on adventure and world-building.

5. Can science fiction predict the future?

Science fiction is often inspired by current scientific and technological advancements, and some stories have predicted future inventions or events that have come to pass. However, it is not the main purpose of science fiction to predict the future, but rather to explore the possibilities and consequences of these advancements. Therefore, while some elements may align with the future, it is not always a direct prediction.

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