npm0925 said:What's a great standalone (i.e., not part of a series) fantasy or science fiction novel? Massive bonus points if it's funny.
npm0925 said:What's a great standalone (i.e., not part of a series) fantasy or science fiction novel? Massive bonus points if it's funny.
BenjaminBirdie said:
npm0925 said:What's a great standalone (i.e., not part of a series) fantasy or science fiction novel? Massive bonus points if it's funny.
Azuran said:
My mom bought this book for me a few weeks ago but I started reading it three days ago. Pretty awesome book. I can't believe I've never read it before.
regrib said:I will be reading (order is on it's way from amazon):
Revelation
Gateway
Tau Zero
Anyone read one of these books? impressions?
I'm ashamed to say that I just gave up on Blood Meridian. More than halfway through and it still seemed pointless. The judge is definitely an amazing character, but I just didn't care about the story. I'm three chapters into The Man in the High Castle and already it's about five times more enjoyable.QVT said:I'm reading Blood Meridian right now. It's pretty good, but at this point it's just vulgar and brutal and sorta pointless. I've not seen enough of the judge and I know about how he is the best character ever.
Alucard said:Yeah, I think I will be all over Asimov over the next few months. I picked up The Gods Themselves for 65 cents at a used book store, and the other 2 books in the Robots trilogy. I would also be curious to check out the Foundation books, and Asimov's more serious musings on life, the universe, and everything in between. I was looking through his section at a used book store, and the amount of stuff he's written is staggering.
Azuran said:
My mom bought this book for me a few weeks ago but I started reading it three days ago. Pretty awesome book. I can't believe I've never read it before.
Mooreberg said:
And then I get to write an essay explaining how "Ghost Dog" is faithful to the ideas in the book. Ugh.
lobsterjohnson84 said:You wouldn't happen to go to a certain Orange, CA college that just finished its bloated overly needless fountain would you? Because I know a teacher at that school that does that exact same assignment for his history of the samurai class. Also...that is kind of an easy assignment so I don't really understand the "ugh"
Oh yeah.... I'm 100 pages in to blood meridian.... the things they hang on trees back in those days.... yeesh.
lobsterjohnson84 said:Well the one that I'm referring to would be Chapman University in Orange, Ca. In the realm of cool classes taught by Prof. Bay are The History of the Samurai, the Social History of Modern Japan (which is an awesome class), and Disease, Power, and Sex: Medicine in Eastern Asia (China, Japan, and a little bit of India).
Adam Blade said:Near the Circle huh... >_>
lobsterjohnson84 said:A circle, a block, a land, a pond, and a stadium if your asking for silly named landmarks
Adam Blade said:I'll agree it's silly.
<- an OC man himself, of the Anteater variety.
Nice to meetcha.
lobsterjohnson84 said:Right back atcha Anteater, may I commend you for having a theater that I go to wayyy too often. Who would have thought my school which has an awesome film school doesnt have a good near by independant cinema when your super science land has the best one in Orange county... oh well.
lobsterjohnson84 said:But back to books..... Hey! Did you know Phillip K. Dick lived in Fullerton? So awesome.
Peru said:Literary buffs: I'm on a bewildered search for science fiction I can enjoy, and in need of qualified suggestions. Let me point out a few things first: I'm not interested in action-driven stories, "Star Wars in book form" or the kind. Secondly, I haven't been totally convinced by some of the "deeper" sci-fi I've read, a lot of the social commentary seems ham-handed - the idea and ideology comes before the story. Thirdly, I read Arthur C Clarke and wasn't convinced. One main problem with a lot of the stuff I've browsed through is their language, and lack of subtlety. Is there any sci-fi which explores a character, or characters mindset, their motivations, the human psychology - in an interesting way?
QVT said:I also go to UCI. Is there a good independent theatre here I'm unaware of? I know there is one right next to the Trader Joes and my gym and that is fantastic, another would be even better.
Peru said:Literary buffs: I'm on a bewildered search for science fiction I can enjoy, and in need of qualified suggestions. Let me point out a few things first: I'm not interested in action-driven stories, "Star Wars in book form" or the kind. Secondly, I haven't been totally convinced by some of the "deeper" sci-fi I've read, a lot of the social commentary seems ham-handed - the idea and ideology comes before the story. Thirdly, I read Arthur C Clarke and wasn't convinced. One main problem with a lot of the stuff I've browsed through is their language, and lack of subtlety. Is there any sci-fi which explores a character, or characters mindset, their motivations, the human psychology - in an interesting way?
Only one of the crew, Father Emilio Sandoz, survives to return to Earth, and he is damaged physically and psychologically. The story is told in framed flashback, with chapters alternating between the story of the expedition and the story of Sandoz' interrogation by the Jesuit order's inquest, set up in 2059 to find the truth. Sandoz' return has sparked great controversy not just because the Jesuits sent the mission independent of United Nations oversight, but also because the mission ended disastrously. Contact with the UN mission, which sent Sandoz back to Earth alone in the Jesuit ship, has since been lost.
Set in a Roman Catholic monastery in the desert of the Southwestern United States after a devastating nuclear war, the story spans thousands of years as civilization rebuilds itself. The monks of the Albertian Order of Leibowitz have taken up the mission of preserving the surviving remnants of man's scientific knowledge against the day the outside world is ready for it.
Inspired by the author's participation in the Allied bombing of the monastery at Monte Cassino during World War II, the novel is considered by literary critics a "masterpiece". It has been compared favorably with the works of Evelyn Waugh, Graham Greene, and Walker Percy, and its themes of religion, cyclic history, and church versus state have generated a significant body of scholarly research.
Certainly seems like one who could nail it - I love Solaris the movie, so why not his books.Cosmic Bus said:You might need some Stanislaw Lem in your life.
Eric P said:my major problem with sci-fi is that the audience is rarely subtle, much like horror.
i would like to suggest two books that i always suggest, they both have heavy religious themes which annoys some people.
The Sparrow by Mary Dora Russel
Canticle for Leibowitz by Walter Michael Miller
Peru said:Thanks a lot, I'll read up on those books and see if the bookstore/library have them. The synopsises seem interesting, particularly the latter. Religious content won't bother me unless, again, it's done in a ham-handed way.
Peru said:Sorry, I did miss it. What separates Wolfe from others?
npm0925 said:What's a great standalone (i.e., not part of a series) fantasy or science fiction novel? Massive bonus points if it's funny.