rosco rathbone
1. f3e5 2. g4??
- Joined
- Aug 30, 2002
- Posts
- 42,431
Stainless Steel Rat is satire, parasitic off the body of classic SF.
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Stainless Steel Rat is satire, parasitic off the body of classic SF.
hrm Octavia Butler is who I came in here to recommend.
Funny, though.
I know I'm in a minority, but that whole genre gets on my nerves.
You didn't like the Rat books? I loved them to bits. When Harrison decides to get heavy is when he bores me.
I liked them as a kid, but I was reading them as straight sci fi then. The main one I remember was a knockoff of "Starship Troopers" and Joe Haldeman did the same thing, same anti-war spirit, much better in "The Forever War" without the...I don' t know what you call it. The Douglas-Adamsness.
The Stainless Steel Rat by Harry Harrison
Kinda space opera-ish without being too space opera ish-more military sci-fi.
Bio of a Space Tyrant is my personal favorite space opera. Even with all the military stuff.
I'd like to find something similar to Star Wars but not a part of the Star Wars universe.
Piers Anthony? I haven't read that in years. It wasn't so much space opera as US politics.
I liked those,too. The Stainless Steel Rat,didn't grab me.I preferred the Bill the Galactic Hero series.
After all that I'm feeling rather overwhelmed and depressed. Something more lighthearted would be quite refreshing right now.
Check out the Honor Harrington series by David Weber -- first book is On Baslisk Station, most recent is At All Costs (Like The Baltic War it was released with a Baen Free Library CD-ROM with the entire series and other Baen books in digital format(s).)Bio of a Space Tyrant is my personal favorite space opera. Even with all the military stuff.
I'd like to find something similar to Star Wars but not a part of the Star Wars universe.
Stainless Steel Rat is satire, parasitic off the body of classic SF.
The Retief series by Laumer is timeless, classic anti-bureaucracy satire. Almost the perfect example of "more lighthearted."Keith Laumer had some good shit.
Larry Niven, of course.
For light, fun, and a bit old fashion Sci fi, try the juvenile section of the local library. Some of that stuff is a scream and very entertaining. The 1950's and 60's writers are the best. Other stuff that I have enjoyed, but may not fit with your desires are: The Martian Chronicles by Ray Bradbury, More than Human by Theodore Sturgeon, and the Space Trilogy by C. S. Lewis.I'm in the mood to do some sci-fi reading but I don't know what to pick up.
I'm not looking for anything too heady or philosophical; fun space-opera will do. I'm not really into the cyberpunk stuff. Golden Age is cool but I'd prefer something a little more contemporary (I read enough Heinlein when I was a kid).
I'm kind of out of the sci-fi loop these days, I don't know what's new or hot. Help a brother out.
Butler is great but so much of a downer. I read Parable of the Sower over five years ago and I still can't bring myself to read the sequel because I'm afraid it'll be even more depressing.
I bought the collected Patternist series last year and got through three of them before I had to take a break and read something cheerful for a change.
For light, fun, and a bit old fashion Sci fi, try the juvenile section of the local library. Some of that stuff is a scream and very entertaining. The 1950's and 60's writers are the best. Other stuff that I have enjoyed, but may not fit with your desires are: The Martian Chronicles by Ray Bradbury, More than Human by Theodore Sturgeon, and the Space Trilogy by C. S. Lewis.
I loved the "linguistics" spin! And of course I have read Tolkien and love him!The Perlandra Trilogy was good. The character of Ransome was based on Lewis' friend Tolkien