Submitted by This_Foundation_7970 t3_10nv0v8 in space
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Submitted by This_Foundation_7970 t3_10nv0v8 in space
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Was coming here to say this, amazing books, some of my favorites.
The expanse books are THE BEST!
Project Hail Mary audiobook kicks ass
Came here to say this. The core science in the books is real and delivered in an understandable dialogue.
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You might like The Expanse series by James S A Corey. It takes place about 400 years into the future and we have colonized most of Sol, with Mars independent from Earth and a working class in the belt. It's also a show on Amazon Prime.
I can't recommend The Expanse enough. My favorite sci-fi series of all time.
It was absolutely amazing from start to finish. I can't belive those guys wrote like 9 novels in the time Martin hasn't finished one.
Anything by Isaac Asimov, Arthur C Clarke. To lighten the mood try Hitch Hikers guide to the Galaxy. Fantasy and comedy so may not suit, but high on ethics, The disk world series by Terry Pratchett.
Rendezvous with Rama, by Clark addresses some ethics and even religion during first contact with a massive alien spacecraft.
It's a good read.
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Checkout "We are Legion (We are Bob)" by Dennis E. Taylor.
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Robert A. Heinlein’s early work. The science is dead on.
Ah, the Skinemax of libertarian sci-fi.
Larry niven: The mote in gods eye & Ringworld
Dan simmons: Hyperion
Anything robert heinlein, isaac asimov
Yeah these are the ones right here.
In preparation for the upcoming Netflix adaption: "The Three-Body Problem" by Liu Cixin (first part of a trilogy). Mindblowing chinese sci-fi, touching many philosophical and physical questions and topics like environmentalism and computer architecture. Expect a GoT-like hype for the Netflix series (same producers), but I found the chinese series to be exceptionally good as well (running now on Rakuten Viki). You know the drill: read the book first. It's always better to read the book first.
I'm really liking the Chinese series, too! A very faithful adaption so far.
There's a Netflix adaption coming?! :o
I really tried to like that book, but I just didn't think it was very well written. The best part is the bit about the revolution at the beginning.
It's hard to swallow at some times, not easily comparable to western sci-fi (especially with the many characters with hard to distinguish names). Still a masterwork. I'm not the biggest fan of Netflix, but they sure know which stories to pick. I had the exact same experience with Game of Thrones: listened to the audiobook, then read the books, watched the show, read the books again... I'm already sure I will read this trilogy again, there's just so much in it.
Hey I just started on a light one too, come join me with Children of Time by Adrian Tchaikovsky.
I'm only on page 43 and the reading is easily digestible
The sequel Children of Ruin is also fantastic.
Try The Forever War by Joe Haldeman. A bit dated but a worthy Sci fi read
Nightfall by Asmiov, Seveneves by Neal Stephenson, 3 body problem by Cixin Liu.
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IMO, most Arthur C. Clarke books fit the bill. A few novels off the top of my head, in my order of preference:
2001 and Rama have sequels, but I'd recommend against reading them until after reading the above. IMO, the Rama sequels are inferior, not so much Clarke and more his collaborator.
Loved the first Rama book. The rest were meh.
Ray Bradbury's The Martian Chronicles probably won't be what you expect, but it's a beautiful book
Loved Bradbury growing up. I remember watching The Martian Chronicles mini series on TV in the 80s.
I haven't seen that! Where would one find that miniseries to watch?
The Martian Chronicles https://a.co/d/acSY2KH
The Martian Chronicles Complete Mini-Series 2 Discs https://a.co/d/d1uS0Bq
Stephen Baxter has some seriously deep, science based, hard Sci-Fi.. a lot of it leaves you feeling.... ehhhhh... lol.. But very good, very engrossing. He also did a really great collab with Terry Prattchet before he died called The Long Earth series. Someone mentioned the Bobiverse books, which are good light Sci-Fi. You want some some good hard sci-fi look up Alistair Reynolds, Peter F. Hamilton, or Neal Asher.
Larry niven: The mote in gods eye & Ringworld
Dan simmons: Hyperion
Anything robert heinlein, isaac asimov
Heinlein's books are very readable and not too long, Tunnel in the Sky, or Have Spacesuit Will Travel are fun if you enjoy a retro sci-fi feel.
Rendezvous with Rama is a great story of exploration, and if you like that, check out Ringworld, and The Mote in God's Eye.
A Fire Upon the Deep, Hyperion, and the Culture novels all have some really cool concepts and a lot of space travel
Old Man's War is a fun read if you like a military story
If you like Andy Weir, check out Delta-V by Daniel Suarez.
Daniel Suarez has other non-space but tech based thrillers that are good as well.
I recommend The Saving of Verano. It’s light but very interesting.
Foundation, David Starr Space Ranger, maybe something not so space heavy, like Neuromancer. And all their sequels.
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rendezvous with rama, the mote in god's eye, and left field weird one: the unreasoning mask.
It’s already been recommended a million times but this is another vote for Project Hail Mary, if it’s not the best it’s in the top three for best audiobooks ever.
Ringworld. The mote in gods eye. The legacy of herot. Starmans son.
Adrian Tchaikovsky’s Children of Time & The Final Architecture series. Both are great.
The Long Way to a Small Angry Planet by Becky Chambers is a weird book where practically nothing happens, then you can't stop thinking about it. It has very strong character work.
The sequel, A Close and Common Orbit has a more plot based structure, which is why I like it better, but still has really great character work. The series is called Wayfarers, there are two more.
She also has an unconnected book called To Be Taught, If Fortunate, about space exploration.
I don't think anyone assembles better titles. These are fairly short and don't focus on violence.
I recommend r/HFY. The subreddit is full of stories built off the concept of 'what if humans, when compared to other species (typically aliens and sci Fi, but can happen in many other genres as well) are super weird/unique?' there's a lot of Mary Sues and the like, but there's some really good stuff to be found.
I enjoyed Frederik Pohl series of books starting with Gateway https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gateway_(novel)
Dune, of course
More fantasy but worth mentioning, Anne McCaffrey's Dragon Riders of Pern series
Andy. Fucking. Weir. My favorite author of recent space sci-fi
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Red Mars, Blue Mars, Green Mars; the trilogy by KSR
Look for the short stories of Larry Niven. They're excellent and if you like them, you'll love ringworld.
Narican: The Cloaked Deception https://www.amazon.com/dp/B07X9NYNP4?ref_=cm_sw_r_apin_dp_N7VVREPDE630164MZ9D3
If you're looking for something light and enjoyable, I can heartily recommend "The Bobiverse" series by Dennis E. Taylor. I've got the audiobook series on hard repeat for me every night.
Not a single Honor Harrington fan in here huh?
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Ur in a foreign country, I'd give a kidney to do that. Read when u get home, go out and explore! Experience what books describe
ArtistNo9841 t1_j6b3xgr wrote
The Martian and Project Hail Mary, both by Andy Weir.