I’m currently reading the Wool omnibus by Hugh Howey. It’s pretty decent I’ve been making very rapid progress as it’s been too hot to sleep here recently now the summer has arrived.

I haven’t seen the Apple show, but maybe I’ll watch it in the future when I’ve finished all the books (I had Shift and Dust as well).

  • allalae@orcas.enjoying.yachts
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    1 year ago

    A Desolation Called Peace by Arkady Martine.

    I really loved the first book in the series, A Memory Called Empire, but I find the second one harder to get through. The writing really gets into the protagonist’s head, and with all the stress she’s in, it gets… claustrophobic, I guess, for me. I wish there was a bit more focus on the plot about the cool mysterious aliens.

  • Walop@sopuli.xyz
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    1 year ago

    I am reading currently Snow Crash. A great example how pioneers of a genre seem to lose their originality over time, but the book hasn’t changed, everyone else has just copied it to death.

    Previously I read some if the Culture series and got surprised by the genuine atrocities popping up in them. The books were interesting and the horrible things had a reason to be there, but I just became overwhelmed.

  • FatLegTed@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    Seveneves by Neal Stephenson. Was a recommendation on the R site.

    Complex, eon spanning, hard sci-fi. I’m loving it!

    • TooL@kbin.social
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      1 year ago

      If you could, what other sci-fi works would you compare it to? I am wrapping up the Children of Time series and could use something else.

      • AWizard_ATrueStar@kbin.social
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        1 year ago

        I sold Seveneves to a friend by saying it is like Neal Stephenson wrote The Martian. Well, at least the first 2/3 of it. It talks a lot about the science how how an event like the one described in the book might happen but with the kind if granularity and verbosity you would expect from NS.

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    1 year ago

    Wool was great. And the show was good too. You can basically watch the first season after finishing Wool, if you’d like.

    I’m reading He Who Fights With Monsters but I’m going to dig through this thread and find a good scifi novel to read next!

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      1 year ago

      I just started HWFWM and it’s my first LitRPG. Very different from what I’m used to reading but I really like so far. Going to try and finish it before I start Brandon Sanderson secret novel #3

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        1 year ago

        It was my first LitRPG too. I wasn’t sure I’d like it but I do. I’m on the 3rd book, actually.

        I haven’t read anything by Sanderson yet but I follow him on social media and I really like him.

  • Rizo@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    Just ended with ‘Children of Time’ by Adrian Tchaikovsky and will now start ‘Children of Ruin’ (the second in the series). I liked it a lot,… the gist of it:

    • Humans terraform planets
    • Humans want ‘crispr’ intelligent apes
    • Humans kill each other
    • Crispr can’t find apes,… uses spiders instead
    • Other Humans come eons later and find intelligent spiders

    The story is told through the eyes of the spiders and the surviving humans and how they try to communicate, think in different terms, fight for the last habitable planet,…

    • Walop@sopuli.xyz
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      1 year ago

      I liked the idea, but felt it feared losing the readers and kept over explaining the spider point of view in human terms. I would have liked the spider society be more “other” and more to be left for the reader to figure out and experience the otherness. In contrast Quantum Thief is set in a human society, but it felt actually foreign and more fascinating since the reader is the only fish out of water and the characters don’t go out of their way to explain aspects of the word obvious to them.

      • Rizo@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        Hmm… never had that impression. But thx for the suggestion, I will try Quantum Thief.

  • k0nserv@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    I recently finished Project Hail Mary by Andy Weir and Wool by Hugh Howey, currently reading Shift. We had the Silo trilogy in our bookshelf for years, but it was only after watching the Apple TV show I decided to read it.

    I have a somewhat newfound low for hard sci-fi and would love any recommendations folks have.

    • FantasticFox@lemmy.worldOP
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      1 year ago

      Have you read The Expanse series? That’s incredible.

      I recommend the TV show too as it is different in some ways and the cast is absolutely amazing (genuinely one of the best sci-fi shows ever made).

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        1 year ago

        I started watching the TV show, but didn’t really get into it. That said, I took me three tries to get into The Wire so I wouldn’t hold that against it.

        Maybe I’ll have better luck with the book series, will check it out.

        • Leer10@sh.itjust.works
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          1 year ago

          Okay I remembered re-watching the beginning of Expanse and it is seriously a slow burn start. I promise you the later part of the show is much more engaging.

          In fact I’d rather you skip ahead a little bit if it meant the difference between watching or not watching. Maybe some other communities have a suggested watch point with a recap explainer

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    1 year ago

    I’m currently nostalgia-reading Robert Rankin’s Dance Of The Voodoo Handbag but that’s more far fetched fiction than sci-fi. Silly, entertaining and lots of tall tales. I’m also reading The Quantum Magician by Derek Künsken. I was hoping for it to be the start of a good series of books to read over the summer but it’s not very good. I will probably not bother with the rest of the series.

      • Silvus@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        Has anyone told about our lord and savior, the audiobook? listening while driving, doing housework, ect can free up crazy time. And if you dont want your first read to be audio, use it for rereads!

        • RBWells@lemmy.world
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          1 year ago

          I read faster than I listen/talk so have trouble with spoken books. The eyes are faster than the ears. Hate video explanations of things for the same reason, usually end up reading transcripts.

          Spoken conversations with real people move at the right pace for me, entertainment TV shows too, and some radio theatre stuff is good but books, have not been able to enjoy them like that, it feels plodding. To be fair I have no driving commute though. One of my coworkers listens to audiobooks only while driving and says that’s the way to do it.

      • StillPaisleyCat@startrek.website
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        1 year ago

        Contrarian view here.

        The Expanse the show is great. My spouse and I couldn’t believe that it was an adaptation of books that we just couldn’t get through.

        We’re avid readers of science fiction and always looking for new authors and series. This is to say we read picked up Levitation Falls when it first appeared on bookstore shelves in 2011. There was no television show to scaffold us and we found the books just weren’t enough on their own.

        We simply found the books just not that original or well enough written to draw us in. Both my spouse and I slogged through Leviathan Falls and DNFd the second book when they came out.

        We both found them derivative of a good deal of of other work against which they didn’t add - specifically CJ Cherryh’s Company Wars written in the 80s and 90s would be at the top of that subgenre. The big central mystery seems to follow the plot arc of the Star Trek Vanguard novel series published 2005-2012.

        It may be that the Expanse handled the central mystery better than Vanguard over the long run of the book series, and I suspect it did based on television version of The Expanse. I just can’t see the books as the peak of space opera that they are held up to be.

  • LamerTex@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    I’m rereading Asimov’s complete saga in “internal story chronological order”:

    1. I, Robot / The Complete Robot (except 'Mirror

    Image’!) [ROBOTS]

    1. The Caves of Steel [ROBOTS]

    2. The Naked Sun [ROBOTS]

    3. Mirror Image (short story) [ROBOTS]

    4. The Robots of Dawn [ROBOTS]

    5. Robots and Empire [ROBOTS]

    6. The Stars, Like Dust-- [EMPIRE]

    7. The Currents of Space [EMPIRE]

    8. Pebble in the Sky [EMPIRE]

    9. Prelude to Foundation [FOUNDATION]

    10. Forward the Foundation [FOUNDATION]

    11. Foundation [FOUNDATION]

    12. Foundation and Empire [FOUNDATION]

    13. Second Foundation [FOUNDATION]

    14. Foundation’s Edge [FOUNDATION]

    15. Foundation and Earth [FOUNDATION]

    I’m currently on “Forward the foundation”

    • Narauko@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      The Foundation series is absolutely amazing, and I am jealous of you if this is your first reading. One of my formative series growing up. You’re inspiring me to do the whole Asimov read through like your doing, because I don’t believe I ever read the Empire books and never read Robot beyond I, Robot.

      • LamerTex@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        It’s not my first, I think it’s my third read-through, but the first in the original language instead of my mother language (Italian).

        Yes, I really recommend reading the whole series, it’s just amazing!

    • FantasticFox@lemmy.worldOP
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      1 year ago

      I’m surprised The Caves of Steel is so early as it seemed really futuristic compared to most of The Complete Robot, but I read it a long time ago so maybe I’m not remembering correctly.

      • Slyder@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        I’m really enjoying the second one and I’ve already bought the third and fourth. I’m listening to them on Audible and only have 3 hours left on this one.

        I’m loving all of the different stories going on and the different names the Bobs keep choosing, and how each one is different.