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populistmom Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Nov-25-03 11:51 PM
Original message
New sci-fi books?
I have to get some birthday stuff for my resident sci-fi guy and I was wondering if anyone knew of any good new ones out currently. I think most of the classics have already been read by him.
Books on theories in physics are cool too, but new is the key.
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Snow Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Nov-26-03 12:06 AM
Response to Original message
1. Does he like hard science stuff, utopian stuff,
space quest type stuff, or maybe even fantasy stuff? If all of the above, easy. I know one of my favorite writers, Kim Stanley Robinson, is coming out, or maybe is already out, but I recently read The Years of Rice and Salt, thoroughly enjoyed it. It includes both bubonic plague epidemics and Asian culture, two of my interests. The California trilogy is outstanding. David Brin is an excellent writer and very intelligent commentator on current affairs. If your friend hasn't read Postman but seen the movie, tell him it's nothing like, really. Drin's Kiln People is excellent. Other really good current writers include Tanya Huff, Sherry Tepper, Tim Powers, Tom Deitz, Charles DeLint. There's a fantasy/quest lean with these last couple. Oh, and there's a British writer who's like Powers.......hold on - got it - Michael Scott Rohan.

That should get you started. Amazon has all kinds of reviews & commentary. If you have the good fortune to be in Seattle, go to the Magus Bookstore in the U District.
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populistmom Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Nov-26-03 12:42 AM
Response to Reply #1
4. He likes it all
Hard science, but also the stuff that involves fantasy or how the characters intereact within their relationships with each other. Not in Seattle and I have to go shopping tomorrow for Friday. (You diss you wife enough, she's not going to plan too far ahead for your b-day.)
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Lithos Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Nov-26-03 12:17 AM
Response to Original message
2. Some suggestions
Depends on the style of Sci-Fi your sci-fi guy likes. But seeing that he likes books on theories in physics, I will gander he likes the deeper stuff.

You might try William Gibson's _Pattern Recognition_ or Richard Morgan's _Altered Carbon_. I would have said Neal Stephenson's new _Quicksilver_, but it's set more in the 17th Century at this time. Most of Stephenson's books are generally considered required fare for the sci-fi/geek set.

John C Wright's _The Golden Age: A Romance of the Far Future_ is also good, fairly unknown. But it is also about a year old.

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bain_sidhe Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Nov-26-03 12:32 AM
Response to Original message
3. Wyrmhole
by Jay Caselberg. Just came out, so he can't have read it, and it's "hard" sf, in that if you took the science out, it wouldn't work. Or...

(warning, shameless promotion ahead... sensitive sorts may wish to avert their eyes)

Check out: http://writersweek.com/ for another idea...

Karen

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MojoKrunch Donating Member (513 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Nov-26-03 10:16 AM
Response to Original message
5. Just finished two that I really liked.
And I'm an old-school "hard scifi" fan from way back.
The Risen Empire and The Killing or Worlds by Scott Westerfeld.
Excellent use of extapolated quantum science into a stellar Empire setting.

Stephen R. Donaldsons "The Gap" series is excellent.

I've always been a fan of Tad Willams, Memory, Sorrow and Thorn series.
1. The Dragonbone Chair
2. The Stone of Farewell
3. To Green Angel Tower
Part 1. Siege
Part2. Storm

Hope this helps.

Mojo
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populistmom Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Nov-26-03 02:16 PM
Response to Original message
6. Thanks to all!
You gave me a lot to work with. I'll be doing some shopping this afternoon. :)
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Khephra Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Nov-26-03 04:07 PM
Response to Original message
7. "Ilium" by Dan Simmons
Edited on Wed Nov-26-03 04:08 PM by khephra
tthe writer of the Hyperion books.

Plot: aliens recreate the Trojan war on another planet and bring Earthling scholars in to study the project, while they play out the roles of the gods.

VERY dense reading. First book of a duology, just like the Hyperion books.

Editorial Reviews
Amazon.com
Genre-hopping Dan Simmons returns to science fiction with the vast and intricate masterpiece Ilium. Within, Simmons weaves three astounding story lines into one Earth-, Mars-, and Jupiter-shattering cliffhanger that will leave readers aching for the sequel.
On Earth, a post-technological group of humans, pampered by servant machines and easy travel via "faxing," begins to question its beginnings. Meanwhile, a team of sentient and Shakespeare-quoting robots from Jupiter's lunar system embark on a mission to Mars to investigate an increase in dangerous quantum fluctuations. On the Red Planet, they'll find a race of metahumans living out existence as the pantheon of classic Greek gods. These "gods" have recreated the Trojan War with reconstituted Greeks and Trojans and staffed it with scholars from throughout Earth's history who observe the events and report on the accuracy of Homer's Iliad. One of these scholars, Thomas Hockenberry, finds himself tangled in the midst of interplay between the gods and their playthings and sends the war reeling in a direction the blind poet could have never imagined.

Simmons creates an exciting and thrilling tale set in the thick of the Trojan War as seen through Hockenberry's 20th-century eyes. At the same time, Simmons's robots study Shakespeare and Proust and the origin-seeking Earthlings find themselves caught in a murderous retelling of The Tempest. Reading this highly literate novel does take more than a passing familiarity with at least The Iliad but readers who can dive into these heady waters and swim with the current will be amply rewarded. --Jeremy Pugh

From Publishers Weekly
Hugo and Stoker winner Simmons (Hyperion) makes a spectacular return to large-scale space opera in this elegant monster of a novel. Many centuries in the future, Earth's small, more or less human population lives an enjoyable, if drone-like existence. Elsewhere, on some alternate Earth, or perhaps it's the distant past, the battle for Troy is in its ninth year. Oddly, its combatants, Hector, Achilles and the rest, seem to be following a script, speaking their lines exactly as Homer reported them... read more

Book Description


From the towering heights of Olympos Mons on Mars, the mighty Zeus and his immortal family of gods, goddesses, and demigods look down upon a momentous battle, observing -- and often influencing -- the legendary exploits of Paris, Achilles, Hector, Odysseus, and the clashing armies of Greece and Troy.

Thomas Hockenberry, former twenty-first-century professor and Iliad scholar, watches as well. It is Hockenberry's duty to observe and report on the Trojan War's progress to the so-called deities who saw fit to return him from the dead. But the muse he serves has a new assignment for the wary scholic, one dictated by Aphrodite herself. With the help of fortieth-century technology, Hockenberry is to infiltrate Olympos, spy on its divine inhabitants ... and ultimately destroy Aphrodite's sister and rival, the goddess Pallas Athena.

On an Earth profoundly changed since the departure of the Post-Humans centuries earlier, the great events on the bloody plains of Ilium serve as mere entertainment. Its scenes of unrivaled heroics and unequaled carnage add excitement to human lives devoid of courage, strife, labor, and purpose. But this eloi-like existence is not enough for Harman, a man in the last year of his last Twenty. That rarest of post-postmodern men -- an "adventurer" -- he intends to explore far beyond the boundaries of his world before his allotted time expires, in search of a lost past, a devastating truth, and an escape from his own inevitable "final fax." Meanwhile, from the radiation-swept reaches of Jovian space, four sentient machines race to investigate -- and, perhaps, terminate -- the potentially catastrophic emissions of unexplained quantum-flux emanating from a mountaintop miles above the terraformed surface of Mars ...

The first book in a remarkable two-part epic to be concluded in the upcoming Olympos, Dan Simmons's Ilium is a breathtaking adventure, enormous in scope and imagination, sweeping across time and space to connect three seemingly disparate stories in fresh, thrilling, and totally unexpected ways. A truly masterful work of speculative fiction, it is quite possibly Simmons's finest achievement to date in an already storied literary career.

http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0380978938/qid=1069880806/sr=2-1/ref=sr_2_1/104-3291458-5877528
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Ratty Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Nov-26-03 04:39 PM
Response to Original message
8. Jack McDevitt: Omega
But it's the latest in a series. I don't really know how stand-alone it is. The series starts with Engines of God, which is an awesome book. I read it twice.
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