Re: Science Fiction In General

2004-01-30 Thread Travis Edmunds

From: Robert Seeberger [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Reply-To: Killer Bs Discussion [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: Killer Bs Discussion [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: Science Fiction In General
Date: Sun, 11 Jan 2004 18:59:33 -0600
- Original Message -
From: Travis Edmunds [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Sunday, January 11, 2004 5:52 PM
Subject: Re: Science Fiction In General

 From: Robert Seeberger [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Reply-To: Killer Bs Discussion [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 To: Killer Bs Discussion [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Subject: Re: Science Fiction In General
 Date: Tue, 6 Jan 2004 20:31:24 -0600
 
 - Original Message -
 From: Travis Edmunds [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Sent: Tuesday, January 06, 2004 6:24 PM
 Subject: Re: Science Fiction In General

   From: Robert Seeberger [EMAIL PROTECTED]
   Reply-To: Killer Bs Discussion [EMAIL PROTECTED]
   To: Killer Bs Discussion [EMAIL PROTECTED]
   Subject: Re: Science Fiction In General
   Date: Mon, 5 Jan 2004 18:24:15 -0600
   
   - Original Message -
   From: Travis Edmunds [EMAIL PROTECTED]
   To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
   Sent: Monday, January 05, 2004 10:42 AM
   Subject: Re: Science Fiction In General
  
   
   I've read every King book as they were published over the last
30
   something years. And I chuckle a bit when I read statements
like
 this.
   Remember Dickens was subject to exactly the same kinds of
criticism
   you make and so were many books that are now considered
classics.
  
  
   A nice, if not relevant comparison. Don't tell me however that
King
 is in
   the same league as Dickens.
 
 Sure, why not?
 A populist writer who reflects his times quite well, but was often
 lambasted during his life?
 I think you could make lots of comparisons. A lot of contrasts too,
 but that is only natural.

 I speak of his writing ability.
Oh?
And Dickens is special exacly how?
In his time Dickens was not especially respectedexcept by the
general public and even then not by all.
There were many writers who were thought to be of higher quality than
Dickens, after all Dickens was pandering to the public, but the other
writers are not as well known today.
What about todays standards Robert? Isn't it the general consensus that 
Dickens is a great writer?
And the general consensus is really of what I speak. Because that is the 
closest we subjective beings can come to objectivity.


   
   King, like most of us is a child of the television era, and
like
 many
   of us, grew up watching horror movies. This is strongly
reflected
 in
   his writing and the smell of matinee popcorn wafts from every
page.
  
   Pure gold in words. I really like that.
  
 
 Thanks, I learned how to write while reading Stephen Kings books.
G
 

 lol I bet. Speaking of writing, do you? (Fiction that is)

Some here, would tell that is all that I write. G (Hi Yall!)
Actually we had a little group here writing a sequal to Startide
Rising ayear or two ago.
Whatever happened to that?
I am currently stuck in the middle of a story for the [Janelle] mythos
that I can't seem to get to progress. (Its about Brin-L in a parralel
world more or less, something that Dr Brin himself actually
started..quite by accident G)
Do you have anything online? I should truly love to read something if it is 
available.


 
 Travis, what I find objectionable in the above paragraph is that
you
 set yourself up as an objective authority or as a party who has
access
 to objective reality.
 You aren't and you don't.

 True. Yet the fact remains that he is indeed mediocre in regard to
his
 writing ability.
Unfortunately you cannot make objective statements since you enter
with preexisting prejudices. This makes the starting point for your
argument a position of weakness.
Of course I'm unable to be objective also, but knowing this, I only
have to expose your arguments. I don't need to make any claims of my
own.
Ah but I can.

 Let me draw out a little analogy. You are taught in school
 that 2 + 2 = 4, and you tell all your friends about it. You are in
fact
 talking about it when along come Travis. Now Travis looks at you and
says:
 That's not right. You're setting yourself up as an objective
authority or
 as a party who has access to objective reality. You aren't and you
don't.

 Oops. There's the mistake Robert. You see 2 + 2 does in fact equal
4, and to
 say otherwise is an easy avenue in which to base an argument. But an
avenue
 that's flawed because it denies the truth.
So you set up a strawman and then destroy it yourself.
Who's side are you on anyway? G
 Of course I'm not the objective
 king (pun intended), as it's impossible to be 100% objective, as we
humans
 are subject to exist within the confines of our own little minds,
thus
 rendering us subjective. It's all about perspective really; and when
you
 think about it, perspective is all we have. However, once again we,
as
 humans have to collectively agree upon things. Thus creating truth
as we
 know it. Take language for example

Re: Science Fiction In General

2004-01-11 Thread Travis Edmunds

From: Robert Seeberger [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Reply-To: Killer Bs Discussion [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: Killer Bs Discussion [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: Science Fiction In General
Date: Tue, 6 Jan 2004 20:31:24 -0600
- Original Message -
From: Travis Edmunds [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Tuesday, January 06, 2004 6:24 PM
Subject: Re: Science Fiction In General

 From: Robert Seeberger [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Reply-To: Killer Bs Discussion [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 To: Killer Bs Discussion [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Subject: Re: Science Fiction In General
 Date: Mon, 5 Jan 2004 18:24:15 -0600
 
 - Original Message -
 From: Travis Edmunds [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Sent: Monday, January 05, 2004 10:42 AM
 Subject: Re: Science Fiction In General

 
 I've read every King book as they were published over the last 30
 something years. And I chuckle a bit when I read statements like
this.
 Remember Dickens was subject to exactly the same kinds of criticism
 you make and so were many books that are now considered classics.


 A nice, if not relevant comparison. Don't tell me however that King
is in
 the same league as Dickens.
Sure, why not?
A populist writer who reflects his times quite well, but was often
lambasted during his life?
I think you could make lots of comparisons. A lot of contrasts too,
but that is only natural.
I speak of his writing ability.

 
 King, like most of us is a child of the television era, and like
many
 of us, grew up watching horror movies. This is strongly reflected
in
 his writing and the smell of matinee popcorn wafts from every page.

 Pure gold in words. I really like that.

Thanks, I learned how to write while reading Stephen Kings books. G

lol I bet. Speaking of writing, do you? (Fiction that is)


I do however judge King
 himself, and render a verdict of which you already know. And it's
more than
 just pure taste or raw opinion. King is without a doubt a mediocre
 writer.(See actual definition of mediocre)
Well, you are not in any way judging King himself, you are judging
his abilities and qualities as a writer, and that is not in any way
the same thing.
You have me so to speak, on that score. I never covered my tracks on that 
one and deserve the correction. But of course, judging his abilities and 
qualities as a writer is what I meant.

[Here, I take a swipe at Travis, but it is meant only as a criticism
of the theme he presents and not as an attack of Travis personally or
his abilities and qualities as a writerG]
Lets agree shall we, that from now on statements like that are not needed 
between us (unless otherwise stated!! lol), as I find you quite agreeable.

Travis, what I find objectionable in the above paragraph is that you
set yourself up as an objective authority or as a party who has access
to objective reality.
You aren't and you don't.
True. Yet the fact remains that he is indeed mediocre in regard to his 
writing ability. Let me draw out a little analogy. You are taught in school 
that 2 + 2 = 4, and you tell all your friends about it. You are in fact 
talking about it when along come Travis. Now Travis looks at you and says: 
That's not right. You're setting yourself up as an objective authority or 
as a party who has access to objective reality. You aren't and you don't.

Oops. There's the mistake Robert. You see 2 + 2 does in fact equal 4, and to 
say otherwise is an easy avenue in which to base an argument. But an avenue 
that's flawed because it denies the truth. Of course I'm not the objective 
king (pun intended), as it's impossible to be 100% objective, as we humans 
are subject to exist within the confines of our own little minds, thus 
rendering us subjective. It's all about perspective really; and when you 
think about it, perspective is all we have. However, once again we, as 
humans have to collectively agree upon things. Thus creating truth as we 
know it. Take language for example. It's an agreed upon set of symbols. It 
may not be an objective way to convey ideas, but it's the best we have, and 
we agree (whether consciously or not) to use it and stand by it as a means 
of communication. The same goes for law, math, what's funny, what's 
not...blah blah blah.up to and including literature. That's where I 
base MY argument; in truth, which yes, IS subjective due to individual 
perspective, but at least it's a unanimously agreed upon principal.

-Travis hope we can keep this up Edmunds...lol

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Re: Science Fiction In General

2004-01-11 Thread Robert Seeberger

- Original Message - 
From: Travis Edmunds [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Sunday, January 11, 2004 5:52 PM
Subject: Re: Science Fiction In General



 From: Robert Seeberger [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Reply-To: Killer Bs Discussion [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 To: Killer Bs Discussion [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Subject: Re: Science Fiction In General
 Date: Tue, 6 Jan 2004 20:31:24 -0600
 
 - Original Message -
 From: Travis Edmunds [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Sent: Tuesday, January 06, 2004 6:24 PM
 Subject: Re: Science Fiction In General

   From: Robert Seeberger [EMAIL PROTECTED]
   Reply-To: Killer Bs Discussion [EMAIL PROTECTED]
   To: Killer Bs Discussion [EMAIL PROTECTED]
   Subject: Re: Science Fiction In General
   Date: Mon, 5 Jan 2004 18:24:15 -0600
   
   - Original Message -
   From: Travis Edmunds [EMAIL PROTECTED]
   To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
   Sent: Monday, January 05, 2004 10:42 AM
   Subject: Re: Science Fiction In General
  
   
   I've read every King book as they were published over the last
30
   something years. And I chuckle a bit when I read statements
like
 this.
   Remember Dickens was subject to exactly the same kinds of
criticism
   you make and so were many books that are now considered
classics.
  
  
   A nice, if not relevant comparison. Don't tell me however that
King
 is in
   the same league as Dickens.
 
 Sure, why not?
 A populist writer who reflects his times quite well, but was often
 lambasted during his life?
 I think you could make lots of comparisons. A lot of contrasts too,
 but that is only natural.

 I speak of his writing ability.

Oh?
And Dickens is special exacly how?
In his time Dickens was not especially respectedexcept by the
general public and even then not by all.
There were many writers who were thought to be of higher quality than
Dickens, after all Dickens was pandering to the public, but the other
writers are not as well known today.


   
   King, like most of us is a child of the television era, and
like
 many
   of us, grew up watching horror movies. This is strongly
reflected
 in
   his writing and the smell of matinee popcorn wafts from every
page.
  
   Pure gold in words. I really like that.
  
 
 Thanks, I learned how to write while reading Stephen Kings books.
G
 

 lol I bet. Speaking of writing, do you? (Fiction that is)


Some here, would tell that is all that I write. G (Hi Yall!)
Actually we had a little group here writing a sequal to Startide
Rising ayear or two ago.
Whatever happened to that?

I am currently stuck in the middle of a story for the [Janelle] mythos
that I can't seem to get to progress. (Its about Brin-L in a parralel
world more or less, something that Dr Brin himself actually
started..quite by accident G)


 
  I do however judge King
   himself, and render a verdict of which you already know. And
it's
 more than
   just pure taste or raw opinion. King is without a doubt a
mediocre
   writer.(See actual definition of mediocre)
 
 Well, you are not in any way judging King himself, you are
judging
 his abilities and qualities as a writer, and that is not in any way
 the same thing.

 You have me so to speak, on that score. I never covered my tracks
on that
 one and deserve the correction. But of course, judging his abilities
and
 qualities as a writer is what I meant.

 
 [Here, I take a swipe at Travis, but it is meant only as a
criticism
 of the theme he presents and not as an attack of Travis personally
or
 his abilities and qualities as a writerG]

 Lets agree shall we, that from now on statements like that are not
needed
 between us (unless otherwise stated!! lol), as I find you quite
agreeable.

Glad the feeling is mutual. Just did'nt want to put you on the
defensive, thinking you were being slammed. G



 
 Travis, what I find objectionable in the above paragraph is that
you
 set yourself up as an objective authority or as a party who has
access
 to objective reality.
 You aren't and you don't.

 True. Yet the fact remains that he is indeed mediocre in regard to
his
 writing ability.

Unfortunately you cannot make objective statements since you enter
with preexisting prejudices. This makes the starting point for your
argument a position of weakness.
Of course I'm unable to be objective also, but knowing this, I only
have to expose your arguments. I don't need to make any claims of my
own.

 Let me draw out a little analogy. You are taught in school
 that 2 + 2 = 4, and you tell all your friends about it. You are in
fact
 talking about it when along come Travis. Now Travis looks at you and
says:
 That's not right. You're setting yourself up as an objective
authority or
 as a party who has access to objective reality. You aren't and you
don't.

 Oops. There's the mistake Robert. You see 2 + 2 does in fact equal
4, and to
 say otherwise is an easy avenue in which to base an argument. But an
avenue
 that's flawed because it denies the truth.


So you set up a strawman

Re: Science Fiction In General

2004-01-08 Thread Jim Sharkey

William T Goodall wrote:
Lalith Vipulananthan wrote:
William T Goodall wrote:
 Terry Goodkind
I used to, but then I read _Faith Of The Fallen_. There is only so 
much political ranting I can handle in a book, so I didn't bother 
with _The Pillars Of Creation_.
Pillars was a whole lot worse...

Pillars was so very, very boring.  Naked Empire stunk too; talk about telling the same 
damn story over and over.  But I thought Faith of the Fallen was the best of his 
books.  He should have ended the series right there, but he's not done feasting off of 
that particular corpse yet I guess.

Jim

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Re: Science Fiction In General

2004-01-08 Thread Deborah Harrell
 Julia Thompson [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
 Robert Seeberger wrote:
  From: Damon Agretto [EMAIL PROTECTED]

[somebody else wrote:]
So what other writers or books in science
   fiction, fantasy, or horror (or
heck, any genre) do people on the list like,
even though they realize
they're not exactly top-notch stuff?  snip

   For me its the Battletech/Mechwarrior novels,
  which (like the Star Trek  SW books have various
 authors,
   vary in quality. Since I play the game for well
  on 20 years I have an intense loyalty to the
 franchise. It
   also happens that the universe is one of the
most
   detailed I've yet encountered...

  Oh!
  So you are one of those who are responsible for
 crowding *real* SciFi off the shelves!
  You oughta be horsewhipped by a really big horse!
  A Clydesdale at the least!!!
 
 Actually, Clydesdales are fairly gentle horses.
 Maybe try an Arabian? 

Hay!!!  Don't you go dissing my babies!  Besides,
they're *much* more likely to _gas_ offenders than
bite, kick or stomp them.  They also have a certain
flair for sarcastic sighs (for you purists who hate
anthropomorphizing: they have a remarkable propensity
to exhale noisily in a manner which, in a human, would
be described as sighing, at precisely the correct
moment, as if commenting disparagingly on a rider's
form, aids, words or some combination thereof) and
peculiarly insulting ear-sets. 

snort!  U U   

Guilty Of Having A Fair Number Of ST And SW Paperbacks
Maru 

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RE: Science Fiction In General

2004-01-07 Thread Lalith Vipulananthan
William T Goodall wrote:

 Pillars was a whole lot worse...

A good friend of mine still reads them and he enjoyed Pillars. Then
again, he didn't think there was anything wrong with the Night's Dawn
trilogy. I thought it was fun and he thought it deserved a re-read over
my recommendation of _Hyperion_ and _The Fall Of Hyperion_. I give up.

 
  David Gemmell
 
 Never read.

The Parmenion books (_Lion Of Macedon_ and _Dark Prince_) are really
good, and are an alternate take on Alexander the Great (well, the second
one is. The first sets the scene). Actually, come to think of it, these
books are excellent. Gemmell is prolific, and the quality tends to vary.
Still, fun to read.

The Drenai novels are also quite good. He's never really bettered the
first three in the series, though he always seems to have sieges taking
place. After the first 5 or 6 times, you wonder if he has no other way
of setting up a tense finish. Also, the first two Jon Shannow books are
cool (_Wolf In Shadow_ and _Last Sword Of Power_). Set in a
post-apocalyptic Earth, where the planet has toppled on its axis and
strange, black-veined golden stones that grant people's wishes, the
world has reverted back to a level of technology comparable to the Wild
West (it's a kind of fantasy Western more than anything). It's 2am and
my brain will probably be able to describe this better after some sleep.


 
  Peter F. Hamilton
 
 May never read again.

I'm obliged to read _Fallen Dragon_ since I bought it. I've ranted at
length about the evil that is _Misspent Youth_ but his one, _Pandora's
Star_, looks quite interesting, even if he is jumping on the Fermi
Paradox explanation bandwagon.
 

 I've only read about five of them. I have no idea what order they are 
 supposed to be in :) I just like stories where people eat cheese...

Right. The first one is present time, the second, third and fourth are
prequels, and then the fifth book onwards follows on from the events of
the first. Or something like that.

Lal
GSV The Love Of Stones


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Re: Science Fiction In General

2004-01-06 Thread Travis Edmunds



From: Robert Seeberger [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Reply-To: Killer Bs Discussion [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: Killer Bs Discussion [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: Science Fiction In General
Date: Mon, 5 Jan 2004 18:24:15 -0600
- Original Message -
From: Travis Edmunds [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Monday, January 05, 2004 10:42 AM
Subject: Re: Science Fiction In General


 King is a mediocre writer, who occasionally achieves a golden moment
or two.
 I often find myself thinking of how he has sold as many books as he
has. Of
 course he caters to the masses, but then again what professional
writer
 doesn't? Given that, I must assume that people are for the most part
not as
 bright as I might give them credit for!lol It's a fine line

 -Travis tread it carefully Edmunds
Its kinda useful to put IMO somewhere in a statement like that,
otherwise one comes off as an elitist snob. G
I genuinely think, that in a place such as this, one doesn't have to 
explicitly state that an opinion rendered is ones own...

As for coming off as an elitist snob, I must apologize for not apologizing 
in the first place, for the fact that, at times I can be one...lol


I've read every King book as they were published over the last 30
something years. And I chuckle a bit when I read statements like this.
Remember Dickens was subject to exactly the same kinds of criticism
you make and so were many books that are now considered classics.


A nice, if not relevant comparison. Don't tell me however that King is in 
the same league as Dickens.

King, like most of us is a child of the television era, and like many
of us, grew up watching horror movies. This is strongly reflected in
his writing and the smell of matinee popcorn wafts from every page.
Pure gold in words. I really like that.


Most of the complaints concerning Kings writing come from people who
aren't interested in the subject matter in the first place. I don't
really like this stuff, therefore it is inferior to the stuff *I*
like, and that should be quite obvious to anyone who is not an idiot.
If I personally, were not interested in the subject matter of Kings' work, I 
would not have indulged myself in it in the least.


They say there is no accounting for taste. But it is just a fact of
life that you *do* have to take taste into account.
xponent
Have I Seemed To Have Been In A Ranting Mood Lately? Maru
rob
And so I do Robert. I do not judge people who read King (I put in the whole 
people not being bright thing to elicit a response which worked 
wonderfully) as that is a matter of pure taste. I do however judge King 
himself, and render a verdict of which you already know. And it's more than 
just pure taste or raw opinion. King is without a doubt a mediocre 
writer.(See actual definition of mediocre)

-Travis sometimes I am not to be taken 100% literally Edmunds

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Re: Science Fiction In General

2004-01-06 Thread Robert Seeberger

- Original Message - 
From: Travis Edmunds [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Tuesday, January 06, 2004 6:24 PM
Subject: Re: Science Fiction In General





 From: Robert Seeberger [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Reply-To: Killer Bs Discussion [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 To: Killer Bs Discussion [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Subject: Re: Science Fiction In General
 Date: Mon, 5 Jan 2004 18:24:15 -0600
 
 - Original Message -
 From: Travis Edmunds [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Sent: Monday, January 05, 2004 10:42 AM
 Subject: Re: Science Fiction In General

 
 I've read every King book as they were published over the last 30
 something years. And I chuckle a bit when I read statements like
this.
 Remember Dickens was subject to exactly the same kinds of criticism
 you make and so were many books that are now considered classics.


 A nice, if not relevant comparison. Don't tell me however that King
is in
 the same league as Dickens.

Sure, why not?
A populist writer who reflects his times quite well, but was often
lambasted during his life?
I think you could make lots of comparisons. A lot of contrasts too,
but that is only natural.



 
 King, like most of us is a child of the television era, and like
many
 of us, grew up watching horror movies. This is strongly reflected
in
 his writing and the smell of matinee popcorn wafts from every page.

 Pure gold in words. I really like that.


Thanks, I learned how to write while reading Stephen Kings books. G


 Most of the complaints concerning Kings writing come from people
who
 aren't interested in the subject matter in the first place. I
don't
 really like this stuff, therefore it is inferior to the stuff *I*
 like, and that should be quite obvious to anyone who is not an
idiot.

 If I personally, were not interested in the subject matter of Kings'
work, I
 would not have indulged myself in it in the least.

Thats why I qualified the statement with the word most.
I recognise your position.
There can be many reasons to like or to not like just about anything,
because liking is a matter of pure subjectivity.

My wife will only read true crime type books that feature serial
killers, ax weilding maniacs, or dead movie stars. Utter trash in my
mind, but it floats her boat. I have to listen to her discourse on the
details of the Jeffry McDonald case at least once a month and PeeWee
Gaskins is mentioned weekly.
But do I claim that Ann Rule is the dregs?
I'll give you one guess.G



 They say there is no accounting for taste. But it is just a fact of
 life that you *do* have to take taste into account.
 
 xponent
 Have I Seemed To Have Been In A Ranting Mood Lately? Maru
 rob
 

 And so I do Robert. I do not judge people who read King (I put in
the whole
 people not being bright thing to elicit a response which worked
 wonderfully) as that is a matter of pure taste.

H...


I do however judge King
 himself, and render a verdict of which you already know. And it's
more than
 just pure taste or raw opinion. King is without a doubt a mediocre
 writer.(See actual definition of mediocre)

Well, you are not in any way judging King himself, you are judging
his abilities and qualities as a writer, and that is not in any way
the same thing.

[Here, I take a swipe at Travis, but it is meant only as a criticism
of the theme he presents and not as an attack of Travis personally or
his abilities and qualities as a writerG]

Travis, what I find objectionable in the above paragraph is that you
set yourself up as an objective authority or as a party who has access
to objective reality.
You aren't and you don't.

Each of us is tucked into our personal corner of the omniverse with a
singular view of the complexity that is most often described as
reality.
It is our individuality.
And it is purely subjective.
And it cannot be any other way.
None of us can ultimately decide for another what is valuable.
We can form a concensus that places value on the things that are
neccessary to continue, sustain, and nurture life, but matters of
taste are out of bounds in regards to an enforced value.
There *are* alternatives to this and many have been explored, but many
of them risk pernicious authoritarianism, and we value our freedom.
So we limit ourselves, intentionally, keeping within our minds those
things we want to continue, that sustain us, that nurture us, in order
that others will partake of the same in their own way and own time,
thereby making room for everyones toes, big and little.

You cannot decide what is good or bad for anyone else in regards to
the realms of taste. And no one is likely to let you.

When it comes to taste, opinions are not additive.
The opinions of 2 people are not of more value than that of one
person.
Nor are the opinions of 50.
You cannot total opinions as if taste were an election.
Taste is not a practical matter.
Taste is amorphous and does not stack well.
Opinions cannot be divided, even though opinions can divide.
Taste does not have to taste

Re: Science Fiction In General

2004-01-06 Thread William T Goodall
On 6 Jan 2004, at 12:19 am, Lalith Vipulananthan wrote:

William T Goodall wrote:

So what other writers or books in science fiction, fantasy,
or horror (or heck, any genre) do people on the list like, even
though
they realize they're not exactly top-notch stuff?

Terry Goodkind
I used to, but then I read _Faith Of The Fallen_. There is only so much
political ranting I can handle in a book, so I didn't bother with _The
Pillars Of Creation_.
Pillars was a whole lot worse...

I'd add to that list:

David Gemmell
Never read.

Peter F. Hamilton
May never read again.



L E Modesitt
I gave up on Modesitt after the 5th Recluce book. It just never seemed
to end, though I really liked the first two.
I've only read about five of them. I have no idea what order they are 
supposed to be in :) I just like stories where people eat cheese...

--
William T Goodall
Mail : [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Web  : http://www.wtgab.demon.co.uk
Blog : http://radio.weblogs.com/0111221/
Those who study history are doomed to repeat it.

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Re: Science Fiction In General

2004-01-05 Thread Reggie Bautista
Julia wrote:
 Of course, *most* of the books in the house are in the library, not just
 the ones I haven't read yet.  I keep track of those partly with the help
 of a data file

With an off-site backup?  :-)

Seriously, I'm looking into getting a safe-deposit box where I can keep
paper, electronic, and sound copies of all of the music I've written.  Right
now I'm about 2 good lightning strikes from losing almost everything, which
makes me just a tad bit nervous.

But is sounds like you would benefit more from a non-water fire suppression
system than an offsite backup.  My wife and I have semi-seriously said that
this would be one of the first things we'd get if we ever won the lottery,
for our room full of books first, and maybe for the computer room second.
(Realistically, we'd probably pay off all our debt first, then buy a new car
for me -- Anita's car is pretty new right now -- then buy or build a new
house with fire-suppression already installed before we move in :-)

Reggie Bautista


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Re: Science Fiction In General

2004-01-05 Thread Reggie Bautista
Julia wrote, re: books by Sawyer:
 I really enjoy his
 books up to the last 3 pages or so, and then I get a little annoyed
 about the ending.  :)

Sounds like most Stephen King books for me, only replace last 3 pages with
last 3 chapters.

Reggie Bautista


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Re: Science Fiction In General

2004-01-05 Thread Travis Edmunds



From: Julia Thompson [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Reply-To: Killer Bs Discussion [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: Killer Bs Discussion [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: Science Fiction In General
Date: Sun, 04 Jan 2004 21:57:26 -0600
Neat.  His endings, at least the ones I've read so far, are neat -- in
the tidy sense.  A little too tidy, if you ask me.  I really enjoy his
books up to the last 3 pages or so, and then I get a little annoyed
about the ending.  :)
	Julia

lol I know EXACTLY what you mean! Too tidy. Usually an ending annoys me 
for about a week after I have read it. Then it all sinks in, and I usually 
accept it as a good ending (if it was indeed good) Of course I have 
accepted the conclusion to Calculating God, but I was a little 
disappointed. Like you said, it was a little too tidy. I just wish the 
book had ended differently. It would have then ranked quite high on my list, 
perhaps even a top 20.

-Travis

If wishes were fishes, we'd all cast nets

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Re: Science Fiction In General

2004-01-05 Thread Travis Edmunds



From: Reggie Bautista [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Reply-To: Killer Bs Discussion [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: Killer Bs Discussion [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: Science Fiction In General
Date: Mon, 5 Jan 2004 07:29:05 -0600
Julia wrote, re: books by Sawyer:
 I really enjoy his
 books up to the last 3 pages or so, and then I get a little annoyed
 about the ending.  :)
Sounds like most Stephen King books for me, only replace last 3 pages 
with
last 3 chapters.

Reggie Bautista

King is a mediocre writer, who occasionally achieves a golden moment or two. 
I often find myself thinking of how he has sold as many books as he has. Of 
course he caters to the masses, but then again what professional writer 
doesn't? Given that, I must assume that people are for the most part not as 
bright as I might give them credit for!lol It's a fine line

-Travis tread it carefully Edmunds

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Re: Science Fiction In General

2004-01-05 Thread Travis Edmunds

From: G. D. Akin [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Reply-To: Killer Bs Discussion [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: Killer Bs Discussion [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: Science Fiction In General
Date: Fri, 2 Jan 2004 07:41:09 +0900
Travis Edmunds wrote:

snip

 -Travis will be reading more Robert J. Sawyer in the future Edmunds

--

IMO, good decision.  I've read most of his stuff.  His works are easy to
read, the characters, while not deeply developed, are likeable, or at least
understandable as they have the same real-world problems as we do.  He does
have some great ideas that other authors would most likely develop a little
more thoroughly, but what the heck, the stories are good.
What can I say? I wholeheartedly agree.



He won the 1995 Nebula for The Terminal Experiment and the 2003 Hugo for
Hominids, the first in his Neanderthal Parallax Trilogy.  Humans and
Hybrids are the sequels.  All are quite good.
I shall endeavor to read those.

-Travis

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Re: Science Fiction In General

2004-01-05 Thread Damon Agretto
 King is a mediocre writer, who occasionally achieves
 a golden moment or two. 
 I often find myself thinking of how he has sold as
 many books as he has. Of 
 course he caters to the masses, but then again what
 professional writer 
 doesn't? Given that, I must assume that people are
 for the most part not as 
 bright as I might give them credit for!lol It's a
 fine line

Heh, my thoughts exactly...

Damon.


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Re: Science Fiction In General

2004-01-05 Thread Reggie Bautista
Travis wrote:
 King is a mediocre writer, who occasionally achieves a golden moment or
two.

You'll notice in my comment, I didn't say King was a good writer, just that
I often enjoy his books.  :-)  There's definitely a difference.  For me,
King's better books are a guilty pleasure.  (We won't talk about his
not-so-better books.)

So what other writers or books in science fiction, fantasy, or horror (or
heck, any genre) do people on the list like, even though they realize
they're not exactly top-notch stuff?  James P. Hogan comes to mind for me,
as well as Nancy McKenzie and Robin Wayne Bailey (IMO _Shadowdance_ is by
far his best novel, and qualifies for me as a non-guilty pleasure).

Reggie Bautista


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Re: Science Fiction In General

2004-01-05 Thread Travis Edmunds

From: Reggie Bautista [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Reply-To: Killer Bs Discussion [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: Killer Bs Discussion [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: Science Fiction In General
Date: Sat, 3 Jan 2004 15:42:23 -0600
Travis wrote:
 Some other series', universes though, that make my top ten
 are as follows:

 -The Vampire Chronicles/Mayfair Witches (same Universe) - Anne Rice
Hmm.  This is a tough one for me.  I thought _Interview_ was incredibly
interesting but ultimately quite flawed.
Interview is definitely one of the best books of the series. But flawed? How 
so?


I really enjoyed _Lestat_ and
_Queen of the Damned_ (especially the latter),
Lestat was IMO a better book than Queen. But Queen was very good in it's own 
right. It gave us some present time action and events, which was nice. But 
the funny thing is that all the people I know who have read Queen didn't 
like it very much. They think it was too jumpy. And I have come to realize 
that indeed it was/is. However when I read it I had an advantage, as I had 
read some of the later books before reading Queen, thus giving me enough 
information to coherently break down that book.

liked _Tale of the Body
Thief_ a whole lot,
Body Thief was like unto an easter egg for Rice's fans. VERY funny, 
entertaining, and it introduced us to new concepts within that Universe.

and thought _Memnoch the Devil_ was the best in the
series (in fact, I think it's probably the second best book Ann Rice has
written, behind only _The Violin_).
Personally I wouldn't go that far with it, as it deviated from the series a 
little. However it is a great book, one that stands alone in Rice's works as 
pure genious. Besides, Lestat (our favorite anti-hero)  needed a new foe.


But my reaction to all of the Vampire
Chronicles books since then can be summed up in one word; Eh.
I cannot agree with you there. Especially when I consider Armand to be one 
of the best books she has written. Blood  Gold, the story of Marius was 
simply fascinating. As was Vittorio, one of The New Tales...

The only disappointments were Pandora, which is pure filler, and Blackwood 
Farm, which was only mildly disappointing.

I thought
the first Mayfair Witches book was ok, but haven't much liked the ones 
since
then.
I love the Mayfair series.


I think even _The Mummy: or Ramses the Damned_ was better than any of
the Mayfair books.
I havent read any of her stand alone's. Including Violin which you asked me 
about.

I just find it hard to connect to them for some reason,


I see where your coming from. The Mayfair characters are more alien than the 
Vampire characters. But I think this is Rice's intention. As a matter of 
fact it's quite blatant. The Vampires are her way of proverbially describing 
the outsider in all of us, which is quite human. And the Witches are in many 
ways the anti-thesis of the Vampires.


 -The War Against The Chtorr - David Gerrold

This series is in my to read someday list but it doesn't look like I'll 
be
getting to it anytime in the next year or two.

Reggie Bautista

I highly recommend that series, if only for the reason that Gerrold has 
managed to create one of the most loveable characters I have ever come 
across in Jim McCarthy. Of course the series is incomplete, but the four 
books already published are worth reading.

-Travis

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Re: Science Fiction In General

2004-01-05 Thread Damon Agretto
 So what other writers or books in science fiction,
 fantasy, or horror (or
 heck, any genre) do people on the list like, even
 though they realize
 they're not exactly top-notch stuff?  James P. Hogan
 comes to mind for me,
 as well as Nancy McKenzie and Robin Wayne Bailey
 (IMO _Shadowdance_ is by
 far his best novel, and qualifies for me as a
 non-guilty pleasure).

For me its the Battletech/Mechwarrior novels, which
(like the Star Trek  SW books have various authors,
vary in quality. Since I play the game for well on 20
years I have an intense loyalty to the franchise. It
also happens that the universe is one of the most
detailed I've yet encountered...

Damon.



=

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[EMAIL PROTECTED]
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Re: Science Fiction In General

2004-01-05 Thread Travis Edmunds



From: Reggie Bautista [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Reply-To: Killer Bs Discussion [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: Killer Bs Discussion [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: Science Fiction In General
Date: Mon, 5 Jan 2004 12:45:57 -0600
Travis wrote:
 King is a mediocre writer, who occasionally achieves a golden moment or
two.
You'll notice in my comment, I didn't say King was a good writer, just that
I often enjoy his books.  :-)  There's definitely a difference.  For me,
King's better books are a guilty pleasure.  (We won't talk about his
not-so-better books.)
Reggie Bautista
lol There were no direct implications towards you in my post. Just my own 
raw opinion. Also I left myself hanging in the hopes of someone realizing 
and saying what you just did. Instead of calling people stupid for reading 
King (or any other mediocre writer for that matter) one must take into 
account that some people know the difference, and decide to dive into the 
works of these writers' with reckless abandon. I do so myself with many 
writers.

-Travis you took the words right outta my mouth Edmunds

Anyone here like Meatloaf? (besides db)

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Re: Science Fiction In General

2004-01-05 Thread William T Goodall
On 5 Jan 2004, at 6:45 pm, Reggie Bautista wrote:

Travis wrote:
King is a mediocre writer, who occasionally achieves a golden moment 
or
two.

You'll notice in my comment, I didn't say King was a good writer, just 
that
I often enjoy his books.  :-)  There's definitely a difference.  For 
me,
King's better books are a guilty pleasure.  (We won't talk about his
not-so-better books.)

So what other writers or books in science fiction, fantasy, or horror 
(or
heck, any genre) do people on the list like, even though they realize
they're not exactly top-notch stuff?
E E 'Doc' Smith
Robert E Howard
Edgar Rice Burroughs
David Weber
Terry Goodkind
L E Modesitt
E C Tubb
Dean R Koontz
Stephen King
...and many more...

--
William T Goodall
Mail : [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Web  : http://www.wtgab.demon.co.uk
Blog : http://radio.weblogs.com/0111221/
I have always wished that my computer would be as easy to use as my 
telephone. My wish has come true. I no longer know how to use my 
telephone. - Bjarne Stroustrup

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Re: Science Fiction In General

2004-01-05 Thread Julia Thompson
Reggie Bautista wrote:
 
 Julia wrote:
  Of course, *most* of the books in the house are in the library, not just
  the ones I haven't read yet.  I keep track of those partly with the help
  of a data file
 
 With an off-site backup?  :-)
 
 Seriously, I'm looking into getting a safe-deposit box where I can keep
 paper, electronic, and sound copies of all of the music I've written.  Right
 now I'm about 2 good lightning strikes from losing almost everything, which
 makes me just a tad bit nervous.
 
 But is sounds like you would benefit more from a non-water fire suppression
 system than an offsite backup.  My wife and I have semi-seriously said that
 this would be one of the first things we'd get if we ever won the lottery,
 for our room full of books first, and maybe for the computer room second.
 (Realistically, we'd probably pay off all our debt first, then buy a new car
 for me -- Anita's car is pretty new right now -- then buy or build a new
 house with fire-suppression already installed before we move in :-)

That sounds like a good idea.  If we come into some money, I think we
should seriously look into it.

Julia
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RE: Science Fiction In General

2004-01-05 Thread Lalith Vipulananthan
William T Goodall wrote:

 So what other writers or books in science fiction, fantasy, 
 or horror (or heck, any genre) do people on the list like, even
though 
 they realize they're not exactly top-notch stuff?
 
 Terry Goodkind

I used to, but then I read _Faith Of The Fallen_. There is only so much
political ranting I can handle in a book, so I didn't bother with _The
Pillars Of Creation_.

I'd add to that list:

David Gemmell
Peter F. Hamilton


 L E Modesitt

I gave up on Modesitt after the 5th Recluce book. It just never seemed
to end, though I really liked the first two.

Lal
GSV Epic Fantasy Glut


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Re: Science Fiction In General

2004-01-05 Thread Robert Seeberger

- Original Message - 
From: Travis Edmunds [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Monday, January 05, 2004 10:42 AM
Subject: Re: Science Fiction In General





 From: Reggie Bautista [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Reply-To: Killer Bs Discussion [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 To: Killer Bs Discussion [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Subject: Re: Science Fiction In General
 Date: Mon, 5 Jan 2004 07:29:05 -0600
 
 Julia wrote, re: books by Sawyer:
   I really enjoy his
   books up to the last 3 pages or so, and then I get a little
annoyed
   about the ending.  :)
 
 Sounds like most Stephen King books for me, only replace last 3
pages
 with
 last 3 chapters.
 
 Reggie Bautista
 

 King is a mediocre writer, who occasionally achieves a golden moment
or two.
 I often find myself thinking of how he has sold as many books as he
has. Of
 course he caters to the masses, but then again what professional
writer
 doesn't? Given that, I must assume that people are for the most part
not as
 bright as I might give them credit for!lol It's a fine line

 -Travis tread it carefully Edmunds

Its kinda useful to put IMO somewhere in a statement like that,
otherwise one comes off as an elitist snob. G

I've read every King book as they were published over the last 30
something years. And I chuckle a bit when I read statements like this.
Remember Dickens was subject to exactly the same kinds of criticism
you make and so were many books that are now considered classics.

King, like most of us is a child of the television era, and like many
of us, grew up watching horror movies. This is strongly reflected in
his writing and the smell of matinee popcorn wafts from every page.
Most of the complaints concerning Kings writing come from people who
aren't interested in the subject matter in the first place. I don't
really like this stuff, therefore it is inferior to the stuff *I*
like, and that should be quite obvious to anyone who is not an idiot.

BTW, I write a version of this post when Brin is called a talentless
hack.
(I've seen those exact words)
They say there is no accounting for taste. But it is just a fact of
life that you *do* have to take taste into account.

xponent
Have I Seemed To Have Been In A Ranting Mood Lately? Maru
rob


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Re: Science Fiction In General

2004-01-05 Thread Robert Seeberger

- Original Message - 
From: Damon Agretto [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: Killer Bs Discussion [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Monday, January 05, 2004 1:18 PM
Subject: Re: Science Fiction In General


  So what other writers or books in science fiction,
  fantasy, or horror (or
  heck, any genre) do people on the list like, even
  though they realize
  they're not exactly top-notch stuff?  James P. Hogan
  comes to mind for me,
  as well as Nancy McKenzie and Robin Wayne Bailey
  (IMO _Shadowdance_ is by
  far his best novel, and qualifies for me as a
  non-guilty pleasure).

 For me its the Battletech/Mechwarrior novels, which
 (like the Star Trek  SW books have various authors,
 vary in quality. Since I play the game for well on 20
 years I have an intense loyalty to the franchise. It
 also happens that the universe is one of the most
 detailed I've yet encountered...


Oh!
So you are one of those who are responsible for crowding *real* SciFi
off the shelves!
You oughta be horsewhipped by a really big horse!

A Clydesdale at the least!!!

xponent
Its Only Humor Damon Maru
rob


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Re: Science Fiction In General

2004-01-05 Thread Julia Thompson
Robert Seeberger wrote:
 
 - Original Message -
 From: Damon Agretto [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 To: Killer Bs Discussion [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Sent: Monday, January 05, 2004 1:18 PM
 Subject: Re: Science Fiction In General
 
   So what other writers or books in science fiction,
   fantasy, or horror (or
   heck, any genre) do people on the list like, even
   though they realize
   they're not exactly top-notch stuff?  James P. Hogan
   comes to mind for me,
   as well as Nancy McKenzie and Robin Wayne Bailey
   (IMO _Shadowdance_ is by
   far his best novel, and qualifies for me as a
   non-guilty pleasure).
 
  For me its the Battletech/Mechwarrior novels, which
  (like the Star Trek  SW books have various authors,
  vary in quality. Since I play the game for well on 20
  years I have an intense loyalty to the franchise. It
  also happens that the universe is one of the most
  detailed I've yet encountered...
 
 
 Oh!
 So you are one of those who are responsible for crowding *real* SciFi
 off the shelves!
 You oughta be horsewhipped by a really big horse!
 
 A Clydesdale at the least!!!

Actually, Clydesdales are fairly gentle horses.

Maybe try an Arabian? 
 
 xponent
 Its Only Humor Damon Maru
 rob

So's my remark (snide or otherwise) above.  :)

Julia
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Re: Science Fiction In General

2004-01-05 Thread Damon Agretto
 Oh!
 So you are one of those who are responsible for
 crowding *real* SciFi
 off the shelves!
 You oughta be horsewhipped by a really big horse!
 
 A Clydesdale at the least!!!

Hah! I've depleted the local supply of Battletech
books to nearly zero! However, its the SW/ST books
that are legion...

Damon.

PS: seriously, if there IS a large local supply of
Battletech books, let me know! I have a few gaps in my
collection, and perhaps a deal can be made...



=

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Re: Science Fiction In General

2004-01-05 Thread Robert Seeberger

- Original Message - 
From: Damon Agretto [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: Killer Bs Discussion [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Monday, January 05, 2004 7:59 PM
Subject: Re: Science Fiction In General



 Hah! I've depleted the local supply of Battletech
 books to nearly zero! However, its the SW/ST books
 that are legion...

 Damon.

 PS: seriously, if there IS a large local supply of
 Battletech books, let me know! I have a few gaps in my
 collection, and perhaps a deal can be made...

Lots of Battletech here.
What would be the easiest way to figure out what's here as opposed to
what you need?

I'm always glad to help.

xponent
Bookish Maru
rob


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Re: Science Fiction In General

2004-01-04 Thread Julia Thompson
Bryon Daly wrote:
 
 From: Travis Edmunds [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 
 -Calculating God (Robert J Sawyer/Anyone heard of him or the book?/He has
 won a Nebula)
 
 This is sitting on my pile of to-be-read books.  I thought my pile was
 large, with about 40 or so sitting on the shelf, but it's dwarfed by Julia's
 pile.  (Julia - where do you store all of them?)

In the library.

It's a 20' X 20' room over the garage; there are 21 bookcases against
the walls, 5 on the west wall, 6 on the north wall, 6 on the east wall
and 4 on the south wall.  There's a map cabinet in front of the area
under the window on the south wall.  There's a closet door on the north
wall, and we have some framed artwork in that closet.  (We've been in
the house for 18 months, still haven't hung all the art we mean to yet.)

Of course, *most* of the books in the house are in the library, not just
the ones I haven't read yet.  I keep track of those partly with the help
of a data file

Julia
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Re: Science Fiction In General

2004-01-04 Thread Julia Thompson
Travis Edmunds wrote:
 
 From: Bryon Daly [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Reply-To: Killer Bs Discussion [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Subject: RE: Science Fiction In General
 Date: Wed, 31 Dec 2003 23:01:39 -0500
 
 From: Travis Edmunds [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 
 -Calculating God (Robert J Sawyer/Anyone heard of him or the book?/He has
 won a Nebula)
 
 This is sitting on my pile of to-be-read books.  I thought my pile was
 large, with about 40 or so sitting on the shelf, but it's dwarfed by
 Julia's pile.  (Julia - where do you store all of them?)
 
 Well, I have it read (past-tense) now. It was a really neat book. Yes I
 think that's the appropriate word neat. I don't think Sawyer is a great
 writer, although he is very fast paced (in a good way), and very intelligent
 in the little things transferred from his head to paper. However his
 abilities as a great storyteller who envelopes one into his/her fictional
 world is certainly lacking. But the best thing about the book and Sawyer
 himself I suppose, is the originality and bold ideas put forward. Like I
 said, NEAT.

Neat.  His endings, at least the ones I've read so far, are neat -- in
the tidy sense.  A little too tidy, if you ask me.  I really enjoy his
books up to the last 3 pages or so, and then I get a little annoyed
about the ending.  :)

Julia

I would have appreciated the endings a lot more 10 years ago
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Re: Science Fiction In General

2004-01-04 Thread Medievalbk
In a message dated 1/4/2004 8:54:03 PM US Mountain Standard Time, 
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:

 In the library.
  
  It's a 20' X 20' room over the garage; there are 21 bookcases against
  the walls, 5 on the west wall, 6 on the north wall, 6 on the east wall
  and 4 on the south wall. 

You can really cause a panic if you ever get a telemarketer call from a 
carpet cleaner offering a set price wall to wall service.

You got me beat, but not by volume per square foot. In a 12' by 12' 
bedroom, I have twelve bookshelves, four of them forming a central core.

Oh, and a double stacked video rack tucked into one of the interior corners.

William Taylor
-
Always needing more space.
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Re: Science Fiction In General

2004-01-04 Thread Julia Thompson
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
 
 In a message dated 1/4/2004 8:54:03 PM US Mountain Standard Time,
 [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
 
  In the library.
 
   It's a 20' X 20' room over the garage; there are 21 bookcases against
   the walls, 5 on the west wall, 6 on the north wall, 6 on the east wall
   and 4 on the south wall.
 
 You can really cause a panic if you ever get a telemarketer call from a
 carpet cleaner offering a set price wall to wall service.

Well, that room isn't carpeted.  :)  Laminate.  Laminate there, and in
the entry and hallway back to the kitchen, and the room I'm typing in,
and the nursery.
 
 You got me beat, but not by volume per square foot. In a 12' by 12'
 bedroom, I have twelve bookshelves, four of them forming a central core.
 
 Oh, and a double stacked video rack tucked into one of the interior corners.
 
 William Taylor
 -
 Always needing more space.

Who isn't?  :)

Julia

and we *had* enough closet space, until we moved Sam out of the
nursery
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Re: Science Fiction In General

2004-01-03 Thread Travis Edmunds



From: Ronn!Blankenship [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Reply-To: Killer Bs Discussion [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: Killer Bs Discussion [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: Science Fiction In General
Date: Thu, 01 Jan 2004 16:00:17 -0600
At 03:16 PM 1/1/04, Travis Edmunds wrote:



From: Ronn!Blankenship [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Reply-To: Killer Bs Discussion [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: Killer Bs Discussion [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: Science Fiction In General
Date: Thu, 01 Jan 2004 15:11:39 -0600
At 12:13 PM 1/1/04, Travis Edmunds wrote:

-The War Against The Chtorr - David Gerrold

-Travis gonna work on a completed top ten Edmunds


I wish Gerrold would work on a completed series . . .



-- Ronn!  :)
My sentiments as well. Do you like that series?


I wouldn't put it in *my* personal top ten, but I did enjoy it, and would 
like to have known what happened . . .



-- Ronn!  :)
OPINION WANTED YOURS IS: Do you think there is an intelligence behind the 
Chtorran infestation? Please justify your answer a little, if indeed you 
answer at all.

-Travis it's fun to conjecture, relevant as well Edmunds

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Re: Science Fiction In General

2004-01-03 Thread Reggie Bautista
Travis wrote:
 Some other series', universes though, that make my top ten
 are as follows:

 -The Vampire Chronicles/Mayfair Witches (same Universe) - Anne Rice

Hmm.  This is a tough one for me.  I thought _Interview_ was incredibly
interesting but ultimately quite flawed.  I really enjoyed _Lestat_ and
_Queen of the Damned_ (especially the latter), liked _Tale of the Body
Thief_ a whole lot, and thought _Memnoch the Devil_ was the best in the
series (in fact, I think it's probably the second best book Ann Rice has
written, behind only _The Violin_).  But my reaction to all of the Vampire
Chronicles books since then can be summed up in one word; Eh.  I thought
the first Mayfair Witches book was ok, but haven't much liked the ones since
then.  I think even _The Mummy: or Ramses the Damned_ was better than any of
the Mayfair books.  I just find it hard to connect to them for some reason,
even though I really like the genre.  I would say that if you limit The
Vampire Chronicles to just the first five, it would probably be in
contention for being in my list of top ten series of books, but IMO the rest
of the series brings it down quite a bit.  Of course, another way of looking
at it is that the entire Rice universe is somewhat interesting and the first
five Vampire novels elevate it quite a bit...

By the way, have you read either _The Violin_ or _Servant of the Bones_?  If
so, what did you think of them?

 -The War Against The Chtorr - David Gerrold

This series is in my to read someday list but it doesn't look like I'll be
getting to it anytime in the next year or two.

 -Rama series - Clarke

See above, although somewhat higher on the list.

Reggie Bautista


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RE: Science Fiction In General

2004-01-03 Thread Lalith Vipulananthan
Ronn! wrote:

 I wish Gerrold would work on a completed series . . .

*lol*

Tell me about it. I started reading this series in 1990, around the time
that _A Season For Slaughter_ came out. 13 years later, and Gerrold is
still alive from all accounts. I think he wrote the three Dingiliad
books to get himself a contract, so that he'd be able to publish _A
Method For Madness_. When he finishes it that is.

Lal
GSV Or maybe he was swallowed by the massive amount of loose notes,
floppy discs, folders etc that he has lying around, all related to the
Chtorr series


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RE: Science Fiction In General

2004-01-03 Thread Ronn!Blankenship
At 07:19 PM 1/3/04, Lalith Vipulananthan wrote:
Ronn! wrote:

 I wish Gerrold would work on a completed series . . .

*lol*

Tell me about it. I started reading this series in 1990, around the time
that _A Season For Slaughter_ came out. 13 years later, and Gerrold is
still alive from all accounts.


I haven't seen him in person in that time, but I also haven't heard any 
reports of his demise . . .



I think he wrote the three Dingiliad
books to get himself a contract, so that he'd be able to publish _A
Method For Madness_. When he finishes it that is.
Lal
GSV Or maybe he was swallowed by the massive amount of loose notes,
floppy discs, folders etc that he has lying around, all related to the
Chtorr series


Like that guy in NYC?



-- Ronn!  :)

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Re: Science Fiction In General

2004-01-01 Thread Reggie Bautista
I wrote, re: the Dune books:
  I hated the second one.
 
  Hated, hated hated.

Damon asked:
 What exactly didn't you like about it? I thought it
 was pretty good...not as good as the first, but
 somewhat better than the third.

It was... it had... it lacked... um...

You know, it's been so long since I read it that I can remember I reacted
very strongly, very emotionally, and in a very negative way to the second
book, but I don't really remember why.

Maybe it's time I re-read it.

Reggie Bautista


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RE: Science Fiction In General

2004-01-01 Thread Travis Edmunds



From: Bryon Daly [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Reply-To: Killer Bs Discussion [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: RE: Science Fiction In General
Date: Wed, 31 Dec 2003 23:01:39 -0500
From: Travis Edmunds [EMAIL PROTECTED]

-Calculating God (Robert J Sawyer/Anyone heard of him or the book?/He has 
won a Nebula)
This is sitting on my pile of to-be-read books.  I thought my pile was 
large, with about 40 or so sitting on the shelf, but it's dwarfed by 
Julia's pile.  (Julia - where do you store all of them?)


Well, I have it read (past-tense) now. It was a really neat book. Yes I 
think that's the appropriate word neat. I don't think Sawyer is a great 
writer, although he is very fast paced (in a good way), and very intelligent 
in the little things transferred from his head to paper. However his 
abilities as a great storyteller who envelopes one into his/her fictional 
world is certainly lacking. But the best thing about the book and Sawyer 
himself I suppose, is the originality and bold ideas put forward. Like I 
said, NEAT.

-Travis will be reading more Robert J. Sawyer in the future Edmunds

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Re: Science Fiction In General

2004-01-01 Thread Travis Edmunds

From: Reggie Bautista [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Reply-To: Killer Bs Discussion [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: Killer Bs Discussion [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: Science Fiction In General
Date: Thu, 1 Jan 2004 01:01:34 -0600
Dune is most definitely in my top ten favorite book series, along with
Tolkien's Middle-Earth books (The Hobbit, The LoTR trilogy, The
Silmarillion, Book of Lost Tales, etc. all as one group), the Uplift books
by His Brin-ness, Asimov's Foundation books and stories, Niven's Known 
Space
stories and novels, and a handful of others I'm too tired to think of right
now.

Reggie Bautista

Interesting. Tolkien's Middle-Earth, and db's Uplift series' are 
certainly in my top ten. The other's on your rudimentary list however are 
not. In any case I havent yet read the Foundation series hangs head in 
shame as I haven't encountered anything (as of yet) by Asimov that I 
actually liked. Some other series', universes though, that make my top ten 
are as follows:

-The Vampire Chronicles/Mayfair Witches (same Universe) - Anne Rice
-The War Against The Chtorr - David Gerrold
-Rama series - Clarke
Aside from those, it gets to be tough choices...

-Travis gonna work on a completed top ten Edmunds

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Re: Science Fiction In General

2004-01-01 Thread Ronn!Blankenship
At 12:13 PM 1/1/04, Travis Edmunds wrote:

-The War Against The Chtorr - David Gerrold

-Travis gonna work on a completed top ten Edmunds


I wish Gerrold would work on a completed series . . .



-- Ronn!  :)

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Re: Science Fiction In General

2004-01-01 Thread Travis Edmunds



From: Ronn!Blankenship [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Reply-To: Killer Bs Discussion [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: Killer Bs Discussion [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: Science Fiction In General
Date: Thu, 01 Jan 2004 15:11:39 -0600
At 12:13 PM 1/1/04, Travis Edmunds wrote:

-The War Against The Chtorr - David Gerrold

-Travis gonna work on a completed top ten Edmunds


I wish Gerrold would work on a completed series . . .



-- Ronn!  :)
My sentiments as well. Do you like that series?

-Travis

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Re: Science Fiction In General

2004-01-01 Thread Ronn!Blankenship
At 03:16 PM 1/1/04, Travis Edmunds wrote:



From: Ronn!Blankenship [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Reply-To: Killer Bs Discussion [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: Killer Bs Discussion [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: Science Fiction In General
Date: Thu, 01 Jan 2004 15:11:39 -0600
At 12:13 PM 1/1/04, Travis Edmunds wrote:

-The War Against The Chtorr - David Gerrold

-Travis gonna work on a completed top ten Edmunds


I wish Gerrold would work on a completed series . . .



-- Ronn!  :)
My sentiments as well. Do you like that series?


I wouldn't put it in *my* personal top ten, but I did enjoy it, and would 
like to have known what happened . . .



-- Ronn!  :)

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Re: Science Fiction In General

2004-01-01 Thread G. D. Akin
Travis Edmunds wrote:

snip

 -Travis will be reading more Robert J. Sawyer in the future Edmunds

--

IMO, good decision.  I've read most of his stuff.  His works are easy to
read, the characters, while not deeply developed, are likeable, or at least
understandable as they have the same real-world problems as we do.  He does
have some great ideas that other authors would most likely develop a little
more thoroughly, but what the heck, the stories are good.

He won the 1995 Nebula for The Terminal Experiment and the 2003 Hugo for
Hominids, the first in his Neanderthal Parallax Trilogy.  Humans and
Hybrids are the sequels.  All are quite good.

The first I read by Sawyer was Starplex (Hugo and Nebula nominee).  I'd
like to see a sequel to it.

George A


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RE: Science Fiction In General

2003-12-31 Thread Bryon Daly
From: Travis Edmunds [EMAIL PROTECTED]

-Calculating God (Robert J Sawyer/Anyone heard of him or the book?/He has 
won a Nebula)
This is sitting on my pile of to-be-read books.  I thought my pile was 
large, with about 40 or so sitting on the shelf, but it's dwarfed by Julia's 
pile.  (Julia - where do you store all of them?)

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Re: Science Fiction In General

2003-12-29 Thread Doug Pensinger
David Hobby [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

Nothing too much that was new.  Mostly more of the same-old
stuff.  (Yawn.)
Oh I don't know, Chelegrans, behemothaurs, pylon country as well as a more 
in depth look at a lot of the stuff that he'd only touched on briefly made 
it interesting to me.  That and an introspective look at the Culture - all 
is not perfect.  One thing; Banks can end a book gracefully - satisfyingly 
and I thought the ending of this one was a good piece of work.

 Depends--what exactly IS a git?  The best definition I can
 produce is one who intentionally refuses to think...
  a foolish or worthless person (http//www.m-w.com)
That's a dictionary definition.  I've read a few.  They
give one the general sense of the word, but don't really settle
what Horza is.  He really seems to be balanced on the knife-edge
between git and not git.
If one acts foolishly for idealistic reasons, is one
really a git?  Probably not.  But add that one's ideals are
not quite consistent, and one is quite possibly a git.
I give up--the Brits can argue this one out.
Well, Horza may have been wrong from our point of view and from the 
Culture's point of view, but he thought he was right, he was good (as in 
skilled), and he had some pretty cool tricks.  And hey, don't forget his 
species was all but extinct so there was some measure of desperation 
involved.

Definitely not a git, IMO. 8^)

--
Doug
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Re: Science Fiction In General

2003-12-29 Thread Travis Edmunds

From: Reggie Bautista [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Reply-To: Killer Bs Discussion [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: Killer Bs Discussion [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: Science Fiction In General
Date: Sat, 27 Dec 2003 23:52:12 -0600
Travis wrote:
 -Dune (can't wait to read it/at least two people here on the list highly
 recommended it + the series)
You may have heard this from me before, I'm pretty sure others on
this list have...  I loved the first Dune novel, loved the third and the
ones after that.
Reggie Bautista
So, as far as the entire series is concerned, how would you rate it? Does it 
make your top ten for example?

-Travis

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Re: Science Fiction In General

2003-12-29 Thread David Hobby
Doug Pensinger wrote:
 
 David Hobby [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
 
Nothing too much that was new.  Mostly more of the same-old
  stuff.  (Yawn.)
 
 Oh I don't know, Chelegrans, behemothaurs, pylon country as well as a more
 in depth look at a lot of the stuff that he'd only touched on briefly made
 it interesting to me.  That and an introspective look at the Culture - all
 is not perfect.  One thing; Banks can end a book gracefully - satisfyingly
 and I thought the ending of this one was a good piece of work.

Yes.  It was well done, and fleshed some things out.  But
it still feels weak, compared to the others.
 
 
   Depends--what exactly IS a git?  The best definition I can
   produce is one who intentionally refuses to think...
 
a foolish or worthless person (http//www.m-w.com)
 
That's a dictionary definition.  I've read a few.  They
  give one the general sense of the word, but don't really settle
  what Horza is.  He really seems to be balanced on the knife-edge
  between git and not git.
If one acts foolishly for idealistic reasons, is one
  really a git?  Probably not.  But add that one's ideals are
  not quite consistent, and one is quite possibly a git.
I give up--the Brits can argue this one out.
 
 Well, Horza may have been wrong from our point of view and from the
 Culture's point of view, but he thought he was right, he was good (as in
 skilled), and he had some pretty cool tricks.  And hey, don't forget his
 species was all but extinct so there was some measure of desperation
 involved.

Surely believing that one is right is not enough to avoid
being a git?  Neither is being skilled, is it?
As for his species being close to extinction, doesn't that
provide more evidence of his being a git?  He shouldn't be 
chasing minds in tunnels if he's worried about his kind dying
out.  Most of the galaxy was not involved--he should have got
out of the combat zone.  : )

 Definitely not a git, IMO. 8^)

---David

Anatomy of a git
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Re: Science Fiction In General

2003-12-28 Thread Jim Sharkey

Julia Thompson wrote:
BN?
hasn't been in a BN store for almost 2 years

Hmph!  Way to kill the joke, Julia.  ;-)

Jim

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Re: Science Fiction In General

2003-12-28 Thread William T Goodall
On 28 Dec 2003, at 5:28 pm, David Hobby wrote:

...
I place CP at the top of the list with UoW, Inversions and LtW very 
close
behind.  I need to reread Excession.  I enjoyed it, but it was a 
complex
story with many, many ships to keep track of.  I agree that PoG is the
weakest except for maybe State of the Art.  I read CP first Inversions
second, and have reread both.

And by the way... not a git.

--
Doug
I believe Player of Games is one of the best, certainly
the best first book.  Use of Weapons is probably best, but be
warned, it's not a cheery book.  The rest are all good, but I was
not too impressed with Look to Windward, it seemed derivative.
I like PoG too. Not sure which is best or worst of the Iain M Banks 
books.  I think _The Bridge_ is his best Iain Banks book, and maybe his 
best over all.

Depends--what exactly IS a git?  The best definition I can
produce is one who intentionally refuses to think...
Chambers says 'a fool'. I think Gobuchul is a git :) But it is 15 years 
since I read it...

--
William T Goodall
Mail : [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Web  : http://www.wtgab.demon.co.uk
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Re: Science Fiction In General

2003-12-28 Thread Doug Pensinger
David Hobby wrote:

I believe Player of Games is one of the best, certainly
the best first book.  Use of Weapons is probably best, but be
warned, it's not a cheery book.  The rest are all good, but I was
not too impressed with Look to Windward, it seemed derivative.
Derivative?  Not sure what you mean.

Depends--what exactly IS a git?  The best definition I can
produce is one who intentionally refuses to think...
 a foolish or worthless person (http//www.m-w.com)

--
Doug
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Re: Science Fiction In General

2003-12-28 Thread Damon Agretto
 I hated the second one.  
 
 Hated, hated hated.

What exactly didn't you like about it? I thought it
was pretty good...not as good as the first, but
somewhat better than the third. 

Damon.


=

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[EMAIL PROTECTED]
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Re: Science Fiction In General

2003-12-28 Thread David Hobby
Doug Pensinger wrote:
 
 David Hobby wrote:
 
I believe Player of Games is one of the best, certainly
  the best first book.  Use of Weapons is probably best, but be
  warned, it's not a cheery book.  The rest are all good, but I was
  not too impressed with Look to Windward, it seemed derivative.
 
 Derivative?  Not sure what you mean.

Nothing too much that was new.  Mostly more of the same-old
stuff.  (Yawn.)

 
  Depends--what exactly IS a git?  The best definition I can
  produce is one who intentionally refuses to think...
 
   a foolish or worthless person (http//www.m-w.com)

That's a dictionary definition.  I've read a few.  They
give one the general sense of the word, but don't really settle
what Horza is.  He really seems to be balanced on the knife-edge
between git and not git.  
If one acts foolishly for idealistic reasons, is one
really a git?  Probably not.  But add that one's ideals are
not quite consistent, and one is quite possibly a git.
I give up--the Brits can argue this one out.

---David
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Re: Science Fiction In General

2003-12-27 Thread Doug Pensinger
Travis wrote:

Merry Christmas everyone. And speaking of the most wonderful time of 
the year (sorry Nick), I received some books for Christmas. Three books 
to be exact:

-Dune (can't wait to read it/at least two people here on the list highly 
recommended it + the series)

-Blackwood Farm (Anne Rice/for you Rice fans out there, what did you 
think, as this is the first book that I decided to read)

-Calculating God (Robert J Sawyer/Anyone heard of him or the book?/He 
has won a Nebula)

I got Mary Doria Russell's The Sparrow which I've been hearing good things 
about for years.  I'm just finishing Snow Crash (Neal Stephenson) so I'll 
read it next.  Maybe.

I was shopping for my brother in law who also reads a lot of SF and ended 
up getting him a copy of Iain M. Banks' Inversions without thinking too 
much about it.  I need to get a copy of Consider Phlebas or Player of 
Games (or both) for him to read first as Inversions won't be completely 
comprehensible without reading at least one other Culture  book first.

Banks is very highly recommended by the way, excellent stuff.

--
Doug
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Re: Science Fiction In General

2003-12-27 Thread Damon Agretto

 -Dune (can't wait to read it/at least two people
 here on the list highly 
 recommended it + the series)

Interestingly I bought that just before christmas in
hardback; my supervisor at work gave me a BN gift
certificate, and since they have a mediocre history
section, well I had been looking to replace my sc
edition for some time...

Damon.


=

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[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Qui desiderat pacem, praeparet bellum.
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Re: Science Fiction In General

2003-12-27 Thread Jim Sharkey

Doug Pensinger wrote:
I'm just finishing Snow Crash (Neal Stephenson)

What did you think?

I was shopping for my brother in law who also reads a lot of SF and 
ended up getting him a copy of Iain M. Banks' Inversions without 
thinking too much about it.  I need to get a copy of Consider 
Phlebas or Player of Games (or both) for him to read first

Player of Games is the only one I've read so far, and I liked it a lot.  It seems like 
a good intro to the Culture.  What should I read next from him, you think?

Jim
Not that I don't already have about 10 books in the pipeline thanks to the holidays 
Maru

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Re: Science Fiction In General

2003-12-27 Thread Doug Pensinger
On Sat, 27 Dec 2003 13:47:25 -0500 (EST), Jim Sharkey 
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

Doug Pensinger wrote:
I'm just finishing Snow Crash (Neal Stephenson)
What did you think?
Haven't quite finished yet, battle looming on the Enterprise.  Stephenson 
is a real talent, but I hope the ending is better than Diamond Age.  More 
later.

I was shopping for my brother in law who also reads a lot of SF and
ended up getting him a copy of Iain M. Banks' Inversions without
thinking too much about it.  I need to get a copy of Consider
Phlebas or Player of Games (or both) for him to read first
Player of Games is the only one I've read so far, and I liked it a lot.  
It seems like a good intro to the Culture.  What should I read next from 
him, you think?
Consider Phlebas gives an outsiders view of the culture and allows you to 
entertain THE question*.  But they are all good;  Use of Weapons, 
Inversions(as I mentioned familiarity with the Culture is a plus before 
reading this one), Excession (take notes), State of the Art and Look to 
Windward.  I haven't read the two non Culture books; Against a Dark 
Background and Feersom Endjinn.

Jim
Not that I don't already have about 10 books in the pipeline thanks to 
the holidays Maru
Ah, my Lal-pile** is considerably larger than that and continues to grow 
unchecked thanks to the used book store near my work that I can't seem to 
stay away from.

--
Doug
*Is Horza a git?
**A culture list reference a member of whom, Lalith Vipulananthan, is 
famous for his stack of unread books.

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Re: Science Fiction In General

2003-12-27 Thread Julia Thompson
Travis Edmunds wrote:

 -Calculating God (Robert J Sawyer/Anyone heard of him or the book?/He has
 won a Nebula)

Yes, and he won a Hugo this year for _Hominids_.

_Calculating God_ was nominated for a Hugo.  It was beat out by a Harry
Potter book.  Frankly, I thought that _The Sky Road_ by Ken MacLeod was
the best nominee for Best Novel that year, but it didn't win.  I'm not
sure if I was still getting Locus when the final tallies for those were
published.  (I also liked _Midnight Robber_ by Nalo Hopkinson, but
didn't get around to reading the George R. R. Martin book nominated that
year before I sent off my ballot -- naughty voter!  Then again, it was
the Nth in a series and I had a newborn to deal with before my ballot
was cast.)

On Sawyer, of the ones I've read, the one I enjoyed the most was
_Starplex_.

Julia

who will renew the Locus subscription when she gets to having time to
actually *read* it again
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Re: Science Fiction In General

2003-12-27 Thread Jim Sharkey

Julia Thompson wrote:
My pile is over 800 for fiction alone.

Maybe it's time to put one of those signs at the bottom of the pile like they do on 
queues that cuts it off.  Even if by some miracle (given your family obligations) you 
could read a book a day, you're looking at two-and-a-half straight years of reading.

Someone take Julia's BN account away before it's too late!  :)

Jim

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Re: Science Fiction In General

2003-12-27 Thread Kevin Tarr
At 02:32 PM 12/27/2003, you wrote:
On Sat, 27 Dec 2003 13:47:25 -0500 (EST), Jim Sharkey 
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

Doug Pensinger wrote:
I'm just finishing Snow Crash (Neal Stephenson)
What did you think?
Haven't quite finished yet, battle looming on the Enterprise.  Stephenson 
is a real talent, but I hope the ending is better than Diamond Age.  More 
later.

I was shopping for my brother in law who also reads a lot of SF and
ended up getting him a copy of Iain M. Banks' Inversions without
thinking too much about it.  I need to get a copy of Consider
Phlebas or Player of Games (or both) for him to read first
Player of Games is the only one I've read so far, and I liked it a lot.
It seems like a good intro to the Culture.  What should I read next from 
him, you think?
Consider Phlebas gives an outsiders view of the culture and allows you to 
entertain THE question*.  But they are all good;  Use of Weapons, 
Inversions(as I mentioned familiarity with the Culture is a plus before 
reading this one), Excession (take notes), State of the Art and Look to 
Windward.  I haven't read the two non Culture books; Against a Dark 
Background and Feersom Endjinn.

Jim
Not that I don't already have about 10 books in the pipeline thanks to 
the holidays Maru
Ah, my Lal-pile** is considerably larger than that and continues to grow 
unchecked thanks to the used book store near my work that I can't seem to 
stay away from.

--
Doug
*Is Horza a git?
**A culture list reference a member of whom, Lalith Vipulananthan, is 
famous for his stack of unread books.
This is weird. I know I've read Against a Dark Background, but the 
description does not fit with my memory. I now see it was Look to Windward 
I was thinking of. I need a better description to jog my memory of the 
story. Player of Games, Use of Weapons, Inversions, and Excession I've read 
and can recall, but not AaDB. But total agreement, they are all great 
books. Feersom Endjinn I've started a few times, but it's a tough read. 
Wasp Factory and Complicity are straight fiction (mostly, hehe) and are not 
bad. They are tough to find here in the US. Some stupid laws between 
England, Canada and the US.

http://www.iainbanks.net/index.htm

He has a forum on his site. Does The Culture list know? ;-)

I only have 4 or 5 books to read, but 20 more that I want to read after 
them. Where is all the time going?

Kevin T. - VRWC
I say not a git
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Re: Science Fiction In General

2003-12-27 Thread Kevin Tarr
At 01:47 PM 12/27/2003, you wrote:

Doug Pensinger wrote:
I'm just finishing Snow Crash (Neal Stephenson)
What did you think?

I was shopping for my brother in law who also reads a lot of SF and
ended up getting him a copy of Iain M. Banks' Inversions without
thinking too much about it.  I need to get a copy of Consider
Phlebas or Player of Games (or both) for him to read first
Player of Games is the only one I've read so far, and I liked it a 
lot.  It seems like a good intro to the Culture.  What should I read next 
from him, you think?

Jim
And to add to Doug's answer, I think it depends on what level of sci-fi you 
want. I think Player of Games is a weak book, compared with the rest. 
Excession is very high tech and is my favorite, but it was also my first. 
CP is interesting as is Look to Windward. Both have technology but are also 
character driven like PoG. Inversions is best after those three, because 
you will then know what is going on. Then again, I read it and still don't 
know what happened. (You'll see). Use of Weapons is the best book, but save 
it for last if you can.

Kevin T. - VRWC

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Re: Science Fiction In General

2003-12-27 Thread Doug Pensinger
Kevin wrote:

And to add to Doug's answer, I think it depends on what level of sci-fi 
you want. I think Player of Games is a weak book, compared with the 
rest. Excession is very high tech and is my favorite, but it was also my 
first. CP is interesting as is Look to Windward. Both have technology 
but are also character driven like PoG. Inversions is best after those 
three, because you will then know what is going on. Then again, I read 
it and still don't know what happened. (You'll see). Use of Weapons is 
the best book, but save it for last if you can.
I place CP at the top of the list with UoW, Inversions and LtW very close 
behind.  I need to reread Excession.  I enjoyed it, but it was a complex 
story with many, many ships to keep track of.  I agree that PoG is the 
weakest except for maybe State of the Art.  I read CP first Inversions 
second, and have reread both.

And by the way... not a git.

--
Doug
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Re: Science Fiction In General...

2003-12-23 Thread Ronn!Blankenship
At 05:52 PM 12/22/03, Julia Thompson wrote:
Ronn!Blankenship wrote:

  From the collection Hymns We Would Actually Sing:

Where can I find that?


Actually, I don't think it's been published it yet . . .

(Maybe some time after the first of the year, though AFAIK it's not 
scheduled for the January issue . . .)



-- Ronn!  :)

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RE: Science Fiction In General...

2003-12-23 Thread Ronn!Blankenship
At 09:04 PM 12/22/03, Travis Edmunds wrote:



From: Ronn!Blankenship [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Reply-To: Killer Bs Discussion [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: Killer Bs Discussion [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: RE: Science Fiction In General...
Date: Mon, 22 Dec 2003 17:47:28 -0600
Last I knew, he was on the high council.  Of course, it has been a while 
since I talked to him in person.  I suppose I should read his web site 
more often . . .

-- Ronn!  :)
You've spoken to Mr Card in person?


Yes.  Usually when we have both been at LTUE 
http://humanities.byu.edu/ltue, which I had a small part in getting 
started, but obviously don't get to go as often these days as when I lived 
nearer.  (Though, FWIW, I guess OSC and I do live significantly closer to 
each other than either of us does to Provo . . .)



-- Ronn!  :)

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RE: Science Fiction In General...

2003-12-23 Thread Travis Edmunds



From: Ronn!Blankenship [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Reply-To: Killer Bs Discussion [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: Killer Bs Discussion [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: RE: Science Fiction In General...
Date: Tue, 23 Dec 2003 03:06:31 -0600
At 09:04 PM 12/22/03, Travis Edmunds wrote:



From: Ronn!Blankenship [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Reply-To: Killer Bs Discussion [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: Killer Bs Discussion [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: RE: Science Fiction In General...
Date: Mon, 22 Dec 2003 17:47:28 -0600
Last I knew, he was on the high council.  Of course, it has been a while 
since I talked to him in person.  I suppose I should read his web site 
more often . . .

-- Ronn!  :)
You've spoken to Mr Card in person?


Yes.  Usually when we have both been at LTUE 
http://humanities.byu.edu/ltue, which I had a small part in getting 
started, but obviously don't get to go as often these days as when I lived 
nearer.  (Though, FWIW, I guess OSC and I do live significantly closer to 
each other than either of us does to Provo . . .)



-- Ronn!  :)

So are you an OS Card fan?

-Travis

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Re: Science Fiction In General...

2003-12-22 Thread Robert Seeberger

- Original Message - 
From: Horn, John [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: Killer Bs Discussion [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Monday, December 22, 2003 11:51 AM
Subject: RE: Science Fiction In General...


 From: Travis Edmunds [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]

 I finished off Seventh Son by OS Card the other day. It's
 the first book
 in the Alvin Maker series. Has anyone here read that book, or
 perhaps all
 the books leading up to and including The Crystal City?

 The reason I ask is due to the fact that I rate Seventh Son
 above Enders
 Game. Of course I acknowledge the fact that I'm being served
another
 demigod on a silver platter, but I absolutely loved that book.

I have read all the ones so far.  (I believe the final book has not
yet been published.  Or perhaps it has and I just don't know it.)
I've enjoyed them, for the most part.  It gets a bit preachy but
that's to be expected from OSC.
___

Its out in hardback and has been for a few weeks.

xponent
Held it In My Grubby Paws Maru
rob


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Re: Science Fiction In General...

2003-12-22 Thread Robert Seeberger

- Original Message - 
From: Travis Edmunds [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Monday, December 22, 2003 11:12 AM
Subject: Science Fiction In General...


 I finished off Seventh Son by OS Card the other day. It's the first book
 in the Alvin Maker series. Has anyone here read that book, or perhaps all
 the books leading up to and including The Crystal City?

 The reason I ask is due to the fact that I rate Seventh Son above
Enders
 Game. Of course I acknowledge the fact that I'm being served another
 demigod on a silver platter, but I absolutely loved that book.


I've read all but Crystal City.
As a series it is a little uneven..some of the books are great and some
are a bit marginal, but overall its a very good series.

xponent
Red Prophet Maru
rob


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RE: Science Fiction In General...

2003-12-22 Thread Travis Edmunds

From: Horn, John [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Reply-To: Killer Bs Discussion [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: Killer Bs Discussion [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: RE: Science Fiction In General...
Date: Mon, 22 Dec 2003 11:51:09 -0600
I have read all the ones so far.  (I believe the final book has not
yet been published.  Or perhaps it has and I just don't know it.)
I've enjoyed them, for the most part.  It gets a bit preachy but
that's to be expected from OSC.
 - jmh
That's a mouthfull there about Card. Like you said though, it is to be 
expected, and I do expect it. Therefore I enjoy his work for what it is: 
Completely predictable, yet completely enjoyable.

Also, Card pulled somewhat of a Terry Pratchett in Seventh Son. Obscure, 
abstract notions which usually only thrive in a persons inner thoughts, were 
quite eloquently transferred to paper in that book. I look forward to 
reading the entire series.

-Travis the expected/expect it bit was once again quite intentional 
Edmunds

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Re: Science Fiction In General...

2003-12-22 Thread Travis Edmunds

From: Robert Seeberger [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Reply-To: Killer Bs Discussion [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: Killer Bs Discussion [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: Science Fiction In General...
Date: Mon, 22 Dec 2003 16:34:44 -0600
I've read all but Crystal City.
As a series it is a little uneven..some of the books are great and some
are a bit marginal, but overall its a very good series.
xponent
Red Prophet Maru
rob
So in other words, it's the Ender series?

-Travis pondering the superiority/mediocrity of OS Card Edmunds

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Re: Science Fiction In General...

2003-12-22 Thread Robert Seeberger

- Original Message - 
From: Travis Edmunds [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Monday, December 22, 2003 4:45 PM
Subject: Re: Science Fiction In General...



 From: Robert Seeberger [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Reply-To: Killer Bs Discussion [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 To: Killer Bs Discussion [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Subject: Re: Science Fiction In General...
 Date: Mon, 22 Dec 2003 16:34:44 -0600
 
 I've read all but Crystal City.
 As a series it is a little uneven..some of the books are great and
some
 are a bit marginal, but overall its a very good series.
 
 xponent
 Red Prophet Maru
 rob

 So in other words, it's the Ender series?


No, I would say it is quite a bit better.
But then I was never a *big* fan of the Ender series.

It's better than mediocre, but not a lot better.

xponent
Mediocrity Incarnate Maru
rob


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RE: Science Fiction In General...

2003-12-22 Thread ChadCooper


 -Original Message-
 From: Ronn!Blankenship [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
 Sent: Monday, December 22, 2003 2:58 PM
 To: Killer Bs Discussion
 Subject: RE: Science Fiction In General...
 
 
 At 11:51 AM 12/22/03, Horn, John wrote:
 It gets a bit preachy but that's to be expected from OSC.
 
 
 
 Well, what do you expect when he only gets to preach for real 
 on the fourth 
 Sunday of every month, and then only on a topic that's 
 assigned to him, and 
 that only for about twenty minutes?

You mean Fast Sunday? Why only the last Sunday of the month? 

http://www.hatrack.com/research/student-papers/porschet.shtml

Card has won the Hugo and Nebula awards in 1986 for Ender's Game and in
1987 for its sequel,Speaker for the Dead. To this day he is the only author
to win these prestigious awards in two consecutive years. Card has lived in
California, Utah, and Arizona. He served a two year mission in Brazil for
the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints. Card is a very dedicated
member of the Mormon church and serves as a Sunday school teacher in his
ward. 

And it continues on...


The majority of Card's writing has an emphasis on Mormonism, whether it is
talked about in his story, or whether it is just recognized by Mormon
readers; it is there. In Card's Homecoming Saga (The Memory of Earth, The
Call of Earth, The Ships of Earth, Earthfall, Earthborn), he tells the story
of the Book of Mormon. The main character in the Alvin Maker series is
obviously, to any member of the Mormon church, modeled after Joseph Smith.
The family in this series (Seventh Son, Red Prophet, Prentice Alvin, Alvin
Journeyman) moves away from Vermont because of bad farm land. Joseph Smith's
family left Vermont for the same reason(Porschet). In Seventh Son, the main
character, Alvin has a leg operation at about the same age Joseph Smith was
when he had a similar leg operation. The account of this operation is
recorded by Joseph's mother, Lucy Mack Smith (Smith 54). The Alvin Maker
series is a combination of American history, Mormon history, and folk magic.


In a personal letter that I received from Orson Scott Card regarding what
influenced his writing style, vision, and genre the most, he said: 

...the culture that created me was a mixture of my family, the LDS
church... the public culture of America in that era (as expressed through
television, radio, news, prevailing public views and issues), and the
culture of Santa Clara and Mesa in particular, especially of the educational
system in those two cities...


I read book 1 and 2 of the Homecoming series, and came to the same
conclusion - it's clearly influenced by the Book of Mormon.

Nerd From behind the Zion Curtain


 
 
 
  From the collection Hymns We Would Actually Sing:
 
 Come listen to a high councilor drone, And try to stay 
 awake, It's good he speaks just once a month, 'Cuz that's all 
 that we can take. He's given the same talk so many times That 
 even he is bored, If I cannot keep my eyes open I just hope I 
 will not snore.
 
 
 
 -- Ronn!  :)
 
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Re: Science Fiction In General...

2003-12-22 Thread David Hobby
Travis Edmunds wrote:
 
 I finished off Seventh Son by OS Card the other day. It's the first book
 in the Alvin Maker series. Has anyone here read that book, or perhaps all
 the books leading up to and including The Crystal City?
 
 The reason I ask is due to the fact that I rate Seventh Son above Enders
 Game. Of course I acknowledge the fact that I'm being served another
 demigod on a silver platter, but I absolutely loved that book.
 
 -Travis

I've read all of them but _The Crystal City_.  I do confess
to being a bit upset when I discovered that _Seventh Son_ was only
the start of a series!  (I thought it was stand-alone when I bought
it.)
I do quite like the books, although the last two didn't 
seem to move the series forward as much as the first three did.
Alvin doesn't seem to be too much of a superman for me.
He basically has one extra power, in a world where many people 
have such knacks.  It is a nice general power, but a lot of his
progress is because of his own struggles.
Now is it Science Fiction?  I'd say yes, if only in a 
general sense.  Card has imagined a world with not too many 
differences from our own past, and thought through the 
consequences of those differences pretty carefully.  That is
the core of Science Fiction, isn't it?

---David

What?  Science fiction needs high technology?  Says who?
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RE: Science Fiction In General...

2003-12-22 Thread Ronn!Blankenship
At 05:31 PM 12/22/03, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:


 -Original Message-
 From: Ronn!Blankenship [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Sent: Monday, December 22, 2003 2:58 PM
 To: Killer Bs Discussion
 Subject: RE: Science Fiction In General...


 At 11:51 AM 12/22/03, Horn, John wrote:
 It gets a bit preachy but that's to be expected from OSC.



 Well, what do you expect when he only gets to preach for real
 on the fourth
 Sunday of every month, and then only on a topic that's
 assigned to him, and
 that only for about twenty minutes?
You mean Fast Sunday?


No.  Fast Sunday is the _first_ Sunday of the month.  The fourth Sunday is 
traditionally Dry Council Sunday.



Why only the last Sunday of the month?


If there's a fifth Sunday in the month, something else happens.



http://www.hatrack.com/research/student-papers/porschet.shtml

Card has won the Hugo and Nebula awards in 1986 for Ender's Game and in
1987 for its sequel,Speaker for the Dead. To this day he is the only author
to win these prestigious awards in two consecutive years. Card has lived in
California, Utah, and Arizona. He served a two year mission in Brazil for
the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints. Card is a very dedicated
member of the Mormon church and serves as a Sunday school teacher in his
ward. 


Last I knew, he was on the high council.  Of course, it has been a while 
since I talked to him in person.  I suppose I should read his web site more 
often . . .

(I did think about the possibility he had been released from that position 
when I wrote the earlier message . . . )



-- Ronn!  :)

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Re: Science Fiction In General...

2003-12-22 Thread Travis Edmunds
From: David Hobby [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Reply-To: Killer Bs Discussion [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: Killer Bs Discussion [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: Science Fiction In General...
Date: Mon, 22 Dec 2003 18:25:54 -0500
I've read all of them but _The Crystal City_.  I do confess
to being a bit upset when I discovered that _Seventh Son_ was only
the start of a series!  (I thought it was stand-alone when I bought
it.)
Same here! I knew about the Alvin series, just didn't tie Seventh Son into 
it!!



I do quite like the books, although the last two didn't
seem to move the series forward as much as the first three did.
Thanks for the insight.


Alvin doesn't seem to be too much of a superman for me.
He basically has one extra power, in a world where many people
have such knacks.  It is a nice general power, but a lot of his
progress is because of his own struggles.
True. But it's still the inherent greatness routine.


Now is it Science Fiction?  I'd say yes, if only in a
general sense.  Card has imagined a world with not too many
differences from our own past, and thought through the
consequences of those differences pretty carefully.  That is
the core of Science Fiction, isn't it?
	---David

What?  Science fiction needs high technology?  Says who?


First of all I'm not quite sure why everyone answers that unasked 
question!lol I assume it's due to me posting about Seventh Son in the 
Science Fiction In General thread.

Anyhow as for it being sci-fi, it's borderline. Like you said about the 
technology aspect of it all, says who?

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RE: Science Fiction In General...

2003-12-22 Thread Travis Edmunds



From: Ronn!Blankenship [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Reply-To: Killer Bs Discussion [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: Killer Bs Discussion [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: RE: Science Fiction In General...
Date: Mon, 22 Dec 2003 17:47:28 -0600
Last I knew, he was on the high council.  Of course, it has been a while 
since I talked to him in person.  I suppose I should read his web site more 
often . . .

-- Ronn!  :)
You've spoken to Mr Card in person?

-Travis

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Re: Science Fiction In General...

2003-12-22 Thread Medievalbk
In a message dated 12/22/2003 8:05:15 PM US Mountain Standard Time, 
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:

 -- Ronn!  :)
  
  You've spoken to Mr Card in person?
  
  -Travis

Then ask him why he gave Columbus a telescope.

William Taylor
-
My favorite meaningless rant.

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Re: Science Fiction In General...

2003-12-12 Thread G. D. Akin
William T Goodall wrote:

snip

 Poul Anderson
Read The Boat of a Million Years
 John Brunner
Stand on Zanzibar
 Lois McMaster Bujold
The entire Miles Vorkosigan Saga (Memory is my favorite)
 Thomas M Disch
Non-fiction: The Dreams Our Stuff Is Made Of  an excellent discussion
of SF
 Philip Jose Farmer
To Your Scattered Bodies Go
 Frank Herbert
Dune  (Duh!!!)
 Ursula K Le Guin
The Telling
 George R R Martin
His Songs of Ice and Fire  series (When will book four be out???)
 Frederik Pohl
Gateway  (Easily one of the best SF books ever, IMHO of course)
 Robert Silverberg
The Alien Years
 Clifford D Simak
Way Station
 Neal Stephenson
Cryptonomicon
 Bruce Sterling
Heavy Weather
 Walter Jon Williams
The Rift
 Connie Willis
The Doomday Book

I just picked my favorites by the authors in the list William listed.  This
reading list should keep you busy for a while.

George A


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Re: Science Fiction In General...

2003-12-12 Thread Travis Edmunds



From: G. D. Akin [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Reply-To: Killer Bs Discussion [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: Killer Bs Discussion [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: Science Fiction In General...
Date: Fri, 12 Dec 2003 21:36:19 +0900
William T Goodall wrote:

snip

 Poul Anderson
Read The Boat of a Million Years
 John Brunner
Stand on Zanzibar
 Lois McMaster Bujold
The entire Miles Vorkosigan Saga (Memory is my favorite)
 Thomas M Disch
Non-fiction: The Dreams Our Stuff Is Made Of  an excellent 
discussion
of SF
 Philip Jose Farmer
To Your Scattered Bodies Go
 Frank Herbert
Dune  (Duh!!!)
 Ursula K Le Guin
The Telling
 George R R Martin
His Songs of Ice and Fire  series (When will book four be out???)
 Frederik Pohl
Gateway  (Easily one of the best SF books ever, IMHO of course)
 Robert Silverberg
The Alien Years
 Clifford D Simak
Way Station
 Neal Stephenson
Cryptonomicon
 Bruce Sterling
Heavy Weather
 Walter Jon Williams
The Rift
 Connie Willis
The Doomday Book

I just picked my favorites by the authors in the list William listed.  This
reading list should keep you busy for a while.
George A


Thanks for the recommendations. As for Frank Herbert, I've been anxious to 
read the Dune series for a while; and Clifford D. Simak has crossed my mind 
more than once. However, as big a sc-fi buff as I am, I don't read 100% 
sci-fi, 100% of the time. So it'd take me a while to get that many sci-fi 
authors under my belt. I try to go for the creme de la creme books/series', 
as my many interests and time itself inhibit me somewhat from going all out 
on our fav genre.

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Re: Science Fiction In General...

2003-12-12 Thread Damon Agretto
 Thanks for the recommendations. As for Frank
 Herbert, I've been anxious to 
 read the Dune series for a while; 

I STRONGLY reccommend Dune; its probably my #1 fave SF
book of all time! If you decide to go with it, I'd
also reccommend Dune Messiah, which I found to be a
page turner. Some of the later books are not as good,
but worth reading if you really like the first two...

Damon.

=

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[EMAIL PROTECTED]
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Re: Science Fiction In General...

2003-12-12 Thread Travis Edmunds



From: Damon Agretto [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Reply-To: Killer Bs Discussion [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: Killer Bs Discussion [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: Science Fiction In General...
Date: Fri, 12 Dec 2003 09:10:00 -0800 (PST)
 Thanks for the recommendations. As for Frank
 Herbert, I've been anxious to
 read the Dune series for a while;
I STRONGLY reccommend Dune; its probably my #1 fave SF
book of all time! If you decide to go with it, I'd
also reccommend Dune Messiah, which I found to be a
page turner. Some of the later books are not as good,
but worth reading if you really like the first two...
Damon.

Wow! You really think so highly of that book? Nobody that I know has felt so 
strongly about it. Considering your opinion though, I may go for it. Either 
Dune, or some new books in OS Card's Alvin Maker series.

Has anyone ever read that series? I had heard about it, but was never really 
enticed. Then the other day, as I was browsing around in the local Chapters 
bookstore, I spied Seventh Son, which is the first book in the series, on 
sale for $4.99 Canadian. If purchased before Dec 29 you get a $4.00 mail in 
rebate on Card's newest Alvin novel The Crystal City. Anyway I think it's 
a decent book. As many bad things as you can say about Card, you can't take 
away the fact that he's a good writer in the sense of how he writes. When I 
read his work, I feel as if I'm being cradled in his arms. The only other 
writer like that is Tolkien. I feel like unto a young child, being swept 
away into a fantastical dream world. It's great!!

-Travis

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Re: Science Fiction In General...

2003-12-12 Thread G. D. Akin
Damon Agretto wrote:

snip

 I STRONGLY reccommend Dune; its probably my #1 fave SF
 book of all time! If you decide to go with it, I'd
 also reccommend Dune Messiah, which I found to be a
 page turner. Some of the later books are not as good,
 but worth reading if you really like the first two...

---

Concur with Damon almost.  While not my #1 favorite, it is clearly in my Top
10 SF books.  IIRC, the last two times Locus Magazine has run its top SF of
all time list, Dune has finished #1 both times.  (The Lord of the Rings
took the fantasy top spot).

Below comments are IMO,

DuneExcellent, a must read
Dune Messiah  Not as good, but okay.
Children of Dune  Better
God Emperor of Dune  Okay, but a hard read--much, much dialog and
ponitification by the worm emperor.
Heretics of Dune  Not bad
Chapterhouse Dune  Just got it in a recent Amazon shipment--in my
to read stack.

George A


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Re: Science Fiction In General...

2003-12-12 Thread William T Goodall
On 12 Dec 2003, at 5:10 pm, Damon Agretto wrote:

Thanks for the recommendations. As for Frank
Herbert, I've been anxious to
read the Dune series for a while;
I STRONGLY reccommend Dune; its probably my #1 fave SF
book of all time! If you decide to go with it, I'd
also reccommend Dune Messiah, which I found to be a
page turner. Some of the later books are not as good,
but worth reading if you really like the first two...
I recently acquired a bunch of old Astounding/Analog and other sf mags 
from the late 50's and early 60's for next to nothing from a small-town 
used book store. Somebody died and their collection got bought for 
pennies. One of them was the Astounding that had the first part of the 
serialisation of the first part of _Dune_. I think it had a Bonestell 
cover. Of course, I can't lay my hands on it now...[1]

[1] What women call 'tidying up your office' men call 'losing stuff'.

--
William T Goodall
Mail : [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Web  : http://www.wtgab.demon.co.uk
Blog : http://radio.weblogs.com/0111221/
Mac OS X is a rock-solid system that's beautifully designed. I much 
prefer it to Linux. - Bill Joy.

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Re: Science Fiction In General...

2003-12-12 Thread Damon Agretto

 [1] What women call 'tidying up your office' men
 call 'losing stuff'.

And it ends up at the Thrift Store or used book shop
for some other unsuspecting sap to buy it so that it
can be tidied up by the misses and re-enter
circulation...

Damon.


=

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[EMAIL PROTECTED]
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Re: Science Fiction In General...

2003-12-12 Thread Julia Thompson
William T Goodall wrote:

 I recently acquired a bunch of old Astounding/Analog and other sf mags
 from the late 50's and early 60's for next to nothing from a small-town
 used book store. Somebody died and their collection got bought for
 pennies. One of them was the Astounding that had the first part of the
 serialisation of the first part of _Dune_. I think it had a Bonestell
 cover. Of course, I can't lay my hands on it now...[1]
 
 [1] What women call 'tidying up your office' men call 'losing stuff'.

That's kind of sexist.

In our household, it's the other way 'round.  :)

Julia

now, the kitchen, that's another story -- but Dan knows where things go,
it's occasionally a problem when his mom or the nanny doesn't ask where
something goes and just assumes incorrectly
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Re: Science Fiction In General...

2003-12-12 Thread William T Goodall
On 13 Dec 2003, at 3:24 am, Julia Thompson wrote:

William T Goodall wrote:

I recently acquired a bunch of old Astounding/Analog and other sf mags
from the late 50's and early 60's for next to nothing from a 
small-town
used book store. Somebody died and their collection got bought for
pennies. One of them was the Astounding that had the first part of the
serialisation of the first part of _Dune_. I think it had a Bonestell
cover. Of course, I can't lay my hands on it now...[1]

[1] What women call 'tidying up your office' men call 'losing stuff'.
That's kind of sexist.
Not if it's generally true. My mom put away some xmas cards a couple of 
years ago and they still haven't been found. My nephew was staying over 
a couple of weeks ago at my parents  so my mum put away  his xmas 
present. Took two days to find it after he left

My dad finally found it...

In our household, it's the other way 'round.  :)
That doesn't surprise me :)

--
William T Goodall
Mail : [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Web  : http://www.wtgab.demon.co.uk
Blog : http://radio.weblogs.com/0111221/
Mac OS X is a rock-solid system that's beautifully designed. I much 
prefer it to Linux. - Bill Joy.

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Re: Science Fiction In General...

2003-12-11 Thread Deborah Harrell
--- G. D. Akin [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

 Good luck getting ANY degree of extrapolation,
 and/or expansion on the
 subject of 'Science Fiction In General'.  This list
 holds the land speed
 record and will undoubtedly surpass the speed of
 light in GOING OFF TOPIC.
 If you want to talk about babies, dogs, cats, the
 Great Republican
 Conspiracy, the Great Democratic Compiracy, or any
 other topic, just open a
 new thread on SF and watch where it will go.

Ooh, you left out *horses!*  And while they only play
a minor part in Fiben's return, and the Gubru
regicide, and the battle on Jijo...they're present. 
;)

Curiously, there are no cats in Himself's work that I
recall; but Andre Norton makes up for that -- I think
the idea of a 'ship's cat' makes sense (hers were
frequently genegineered for spaceflight).  But then
again, I would, wouldn't I?  ;)

Part Of The Threadcreep Brigade Maru

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Re: Science Fiction In General...

2003-12-11 Thread William T Goodall
On 9 Dec 2003, at 1:17 am, Jon Gabriel wrote:

From: Travis Edmunds [EMAIL PROTECTED]

-David Brin (as evidenced by this post in the first place)
You may run into a few of his fans here as well. ;-)

-David Gerrold (Star Trek TOS writer/War Against The Chtorr/and a few 
other interesting books)
He also wrote TNG's Encounter at Farpoint.  His writing always reminds 
me of Larry Niven's.  Creative and conceptually fascinating, but 
fast-paced.
_The Flying Sorcerers_ (with Niven) was quite funny. _When Harlie was 
One_  and _The Man who Folded Himself_ were pretty good. I think I read 
the first in the Chtorr sequence and decided it wasn't my thing, so I 
haven't read anything more recent.

-Terry Pratchett (Discworld series. The little things that this man 
thinks up and transfers to paper are quite outstanding to say the 
least)
I've never read anything by him, but now own a bunch of his books.  
With luck, I'll start them within the next few weeks. :)
Pratchett is great. I started reading the Discworld series when there 
was one book in it :) Now I tend to fall three or so behind and then 
catch up.

-Anne Rice (Blurs the line of sci-fi/one of the most captivating and 
talented writers I have ever come across)
Her Vampire series was first rate up until she began to blend it 
with the Talamasca Witches series.  On many, many levels, her Witch 
characters simply don't work for me.  Most hardcore Rice fans I've met 
disagree with me though.
Haven't read the Vampire or Witch books, but I quite enjoyed the films.


-Arthur C. Clarke (Rama series, that's all I have to say)
Great, great classic author.  If you like him, I highly recommend a 
compendium I recently picked up of all his older short stories.  (I 
love old, outdated sci-fi.)  Will locate and post the link on Amazon 
when I find it.
I prefer his earlier works. In fact I haven't read anything after _The 
Fountains of Paradise_. I think my favourite of his is _The City and 
the Stars_ (vt _Against the Fall of Night_).

-Orson Scott Card (Ender series/the champion of the demigodlol)
I've always felt Card was an author who should have stopped while he 
was ahead of his game.  I enjoyed the Ender series, but... the Bean 
series is just completely unappealing.  I don't like the hero and his 
novels just don't captivate me.  Christopher Columbus was a short 
story that shouldn't have been stretched into a novel.

Ah well.  To each his own, huh?
He should have stopped the Ender series after the first two. And I 
found the 'Homecoming' series unreadable.


-Ben Bova (Has always held an interest for me, since I read Mars)
Urgh.  Bova.  He reminds me of Michael Chrichton.  Characters that 
aren't terribly deep and storylines that read like 'treatments' for 
movies.  I'm not a fan. :-)
I haven't been impressed by any of his that I have read.

-Steve White (Eagle Against The Starslol Ok, so it's complete 
B-side sci-fi, but it's not without it's merit)
Oddly enough, I just finished Forge of the Titans a couple of months 
ago.  I'd never heard of him before when my father-in-law handed me 
the book.  It was different, and I enjoyed it.
I haven't read any Steve White, but I have read quite a few by his 
former collaborator, David Weber.


-Tolkien (I suppose THAT'S just a given)
Heh.  I'm almost afraid to ask, but what was your take on the movies?
I like the movies, but I was never a huge fan. I read the books two or 
three times, last time about thirty years ago :)


-Various Star Trek and Star Wars novels tend to find their way into 
my personal library.
IMO, Peter David's the only one worth reading. :)
I'm not into media tie-ins and novelizations and such.


-I also love the Stargate Universe (For those of you who may share 
that interest)
I watch the show on occasion... but I've never really gotten deeply 
into it.
I like Stargate (the series). Despite being a spin-off  of a mediocre 
film with a rather dire premise it is actually quite a good sf series. 
And probably the best that is left now :(

-Michael Chrichton is certainly noteworthy.
Ugh.  Ugh.  and Ugh.  :-D
I didn't like the films and I haven't read the books.


Well, that's enough for now. I look forward to perhaps SOME degree of 
extrapolation, and/or expansion on the subject of Science Fiction In 
General
Well, how about these authors.  Have you read any of them?

Robert Heinlein (Stranger in a Strange Land, Starship Troopers, Time 
Enough for Love, etc.,)
I read all of the early Heinlein, struggled through various dreadful 
1970's Heinlein disasters (_I Will Fear No Evil_ ...)  before 
abandoning him. I read _Friday_ because it was supposed to be a return 
to form, and it was better but not up to the old standards.

Iain Banks (Culture Series)
That's Iain M Banks. Iain Banks is his alter ego who writes mainstream 
novels. I have read most of both of him. In fact I read his first novel 
_The Wasp Factory_ before his second was published. I even have some of 
them autographed!

Vernor Vinge (I 

Re: Science Fiction In General...

2003-12-11 Thread Medievalbk
In a message dated 12/11/2003 2:00:15 PM US Mountain Standard Time, 
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:

 
  Curiously, there are no cats in Himself's work that I
  recall; but Andre Norton makes up for that -- I think
  the idea of a 'ship's cat' makes sense (hers were
  frequently genegineered for spaceflight).  But then
  again, I would, wouldn't I?  ;)
  


If we ever get back to the Garthlings, there should be.

Historical precedence, don'tcha know.

...and Debbi knows what I'd like Alvin to do with
some very large horses.

I think Himself would,'t dare to have put cats on
Jijo.

A Mudfoot thinks:   Tasty.

Vilyehm Teighlore
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RE: Science Fiction In General...

2003-12-10 Thread Travis Edmunds

From: Jon Gabriel [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Reply-To: Killer Bs Discussion [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: RE: Science Fiction In General...
Date: Mon, 08 Dec 2003 20:17:21 -0500
From: Travis Edmunds [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Reply-To: Killer Bs Discussion [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Science Fiction In General...
Date: Sat, 06 Dec 2003 16:28:05 -0330
-Anne Rice (Blurs the line of sci-fi/one of the most captivating and 
talented writers I have ever come across)
Her Vampire series was first rate up until she began to blend it with 
the Talamasca Witches series.  On many, many levels, her Witch characters 
simply don't work for me.  Most hardcore Rice fans I've met disagree with 
me though.
I don't agree that the Vampire Chronicles necessarily took a down-turn in 
being blended with the Mayfair Witches. On the contrary, I think it simply 
spiced things up, so to speak. I do however, agree with you on the fact that 
the Witch characters don't work for me either. The reason being, they are 
somewhat unbelieveable.


Well, how about these authors.  Have you read any of them?

Robert Heinlein (Stranger in a Strange Land, Starship Troopers, Time Enough 
for Love, etc.,)
I've read Stranger. I must say, I found it tedious to say the 
least.

Iain Banks (Culture Series)
Vernor Vinge (I think he's an honorary Bee) (A Deepness in the Sky)
Dan Simmons (Hyperion and Endymion Series)
Kim Stanley Robinson (Mars Series)
Joe Haldeman (Forever War / Forever Peace)
Larry Niven (RingWorld)
Nope. Heard of a few though.


Isaac Asimov (Robots / Foundation Series)
Well, I have read one of the Robots In Time books, written by (Wu?). I 
found it to be somewhat juvenile, and directed more so towards a smart 
gorilla, as opposed to a Human.

Oddly enough I have never gotten around to touching the Foundation series. A 
friend of mine however has been the proverbial monkey on the back, so it's 
quite possible I might get around to those books soon.


Anne McCaffrey (Pern)
Harry Turtledove (How Few Remain)
Douglas Adams (HHGG)
No, No, and can't wait!!.

-Travis

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RE: Science Fiction In General...

2003-12-09 Thread Miller, Jeffrey


 -Original Message-
 From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
 [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Julia Thompson
 Sent: Monday, December 08, 2003 07:01 PM
 To: Killer Bs Discussion
 Subject: Re: Science Fiction In General...
 
 
 
 
 On Mon, 8 Dec 2003, Travis Edmunds wrote:
 
  From: Robert Seeberger [EMAIL PROTECTED]
  
  
   
-Tolkien (I suppose THAT'S just a given)
  
  Whadya think of the movies?
  
  
  I was disappointed in the Two Towers. It deviated too much from the
  book(something that always aggravates me) The first flick 
 however, was 
  decent.
 
 Interestingly enough, my mother-in-law, who has never read 
 the books and 
 isn't likely to, either, was more confused by the first one 
 when she saw 
 it in the theater than the second one.
 
 Not sure just what that means or says, but I'm sure it's something.

I just finished watching TTT:EE last night.  MUCH improved.

-j-
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Re: Science Fiction In General...

2003-12-08 Thread Travis Edmunds
From: Robert Seeberger [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Howdy stranger!
Where ya frum?


Newfoundland, Canada, aka THE ROCK.


Haven't read him since the 70s.(Gerrold)


Good stuff. My advice is to buy and subsequently read his books.


Never read him.(Pratchett)


Excellent writer.

 -Anne Rice (Blurs the line of sci-fi/one of the most captivating and
 talented writers I have ever come across)
___
!Not! scifi by any stretch.
I've read pretty much all of her books as they were published.
I'm waiting for Blood Canticle to come out in PB.
Just finished Blackwood farm.


Well, no, it's not sci-fi. But it does blur those lines with it's subject 
matter in general. I mean the whole premise of the Witches, in Anne's 
Universe is power of the mind. Specifically telepathy (A trait common in 
Vampires) and telekinesis (Also common in Vampires). One might say however, 
that those things simply don't apply, and Anne's Universe is completely 
Earthbound, therefore any connection to sci-fi is null and void. On the 
contrary, nothing could be further from the truth. If you have read 
Memnoch. then you know who or what God is supposed to be in the 
context of that Universe(Well that's if you even believe Lestat in the first 
place, and if you do, then you must put your faith in Memnoch as well). God 
is nothing more than an UBER-evolved being, who wants to discover where 
he/she/himself/herself came from by creating the Universe, to see if any 
beings evolved to what he/she (God) is. (A RAMA parallel certainly exists)

Take ghosts. Anne describes them as Human souls, who basically transfer to 
another dimension. Heaven and Hell, are merely other dimensions apart from 
our own. There are physical beings, and there are spiritual beings. And 
not all spiritual beings are Humans who have passed on. Take the Angels, 
and Amel:
(Responsible for the Vampire), Lasher(Who pulled an Amel in The Witching 
Hour), and of course Lasher talks of other spirits; they are not human 
spirits.

Also lets not forget the other immortals hinted at at various times in 
those books. The great Marius fears these daywalkers. So there are many 
sci-fi parallels, and I have only touched on a few things.
___

 -Arthur C. Clarke (Rama series, that's all I have to say)
I've read a lot of Clarke. He is great!

Referring only to the Rama series, do you have a fav book out of those 4?



 -Tolkien (I suppose THAT'S just a given)
Whadya think of the movies?

I was disappointed in the Two Towers. It deviated too much from the 
book(something that always aggravates me) The first flick however, was 
decent.


 -Various Star Trek and Star Wars novels tend to find their way into my
 personal library.
If it were up to me TV and film Franchises would be banned from the
bookstores! G
I hear ya, but have to disagree. Especially in relation to Star Trek.
Tell you what. Explain to me why you think stories of the Trek Universe 
should not be transferred to books, and we'll have a nice friendly 
debate.lol

 -I also love the Stargate Universe (For those of you who may share that
 interest)
Grrr..I Luv Farscape


Farscape?!?!?!?!?!?!?!?!?!? I've always thought, that it was one of the 
worst attempts at a good sci-fi series that I have ever witnessed. I have 
more truck with series' who are honest about the fact that they aren't 
GREAT.

 MCT

MC Travis?

MCT is my screen-name, that I use in my Net travels. Nothing to do with 
Travis...

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RE: Science Fiction In General...

2003-12-08 Thread Jon Gabriel
From: Travis Edmunds [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Reply-To: Killer Bs Discussion [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Science Fiction In General...
Date: Sat, 06 Dec 2003 16:28:05 -0330
I assume it's only proper to introduce myself, so hello everyone.
Welcome!  *waves hello*

I'm a huge David Brin fan, as well as a fan of sci-fi in general. However, 
as for Mr. Brins' fellow Killer Bees, I have not read any of their works. 
That being said, plus noticing a lack of sci-fi activity in the recently 
archived messages, I decided to perhaps instigate a general science-fiction 
discussion.

As I do not as of yet know any of you, nor your tastes in this genre, I 
might as well list the author's that I hold close to my heart.
*Gasp*  An actual sci-fi thread!

-David Brin (as evidenced by this post in the first place)
You may run into a few of his fans here as well. ;-)

-David Gerrold (Star Trek TOS writer/War Against The Chtorr/and a few other 
interesting books)
He also wrote TNG's Encounter at Farpoint.  His writing always reminds me of 
Larry Niven's.  Creative and conceptually fascinating, but fast-paced.

-Terry Pratchett (Discworld series. The little things that this man 
thinks up and transfers to paper are quite outstanding to say the least)
I've never read anything by him, but now own a bunch of his books.  With 
luck, I'll start them within the next few weeks. :)

-Anne Rice (Blurs the line of sci-fi/one of the most captivating and 
talented writers I have ever come across)
Her Vampire series was first rate up until she began to blend it with 
the Talamasca Witches series.  On many, many levels, her Witch characters 
simply don't work for me.  Most hardcore Rice fans I've met disagree with me 
though.

-Arthur C. Clarke (Rama series, that's all I have to say)
Great, great classic author.  If you like him, I highly recommend a 
compendium I recently picked up of all his older short stories.  (I love 
old, outdated sci-fi.)  Will locate and post the link on Amazon when I find 
it.

-Orson Scott Card (Ender series/the champion of the demigodlol)
I've always felt Card was an author who should have stopped while he was 
ahead of his game.  I enjoyed the Ender series, but... the Bean series is 
just completely unappealing.  I don't like the hero and his novels just 
don't captivate me.  Christopher Columbus was a short story that shouldn't 
have been stretched into a novel.

Ah well.  To each his own, huh?

-Ben Bova (Has always held an interest for me, since I read Mars)
Urgh.  Bova.  He reminds me of Michael Chrichton.  Characters that aren't 
terribly deep and storylines that read like 'treatments' for movies.  I'm 
not a fan. :-)

-Steve White (Eagle Against The Starslol Ok, so it's complete B-side 
sci-fi, but it's not without it's merit)
Oddly enough, I just finished Forge of the Titans a couple of months ago.  
I'd never heard of him before when my father-in-law handed me the book.  It 
was different, and I enjoyed it.

-Tolkien (I suppose THAT'S just a given)
Heh.  I'm almost afraid to ask, but what was your take on the movies?

-Various Star Trek and Star Wars novels tend to find their way into my 
personal library.
IMO, Peter David's the only one worth reading. :)

-I also love the Stargate Universe (For those of you who may share that 
interest)
I watch the show on occasion... but I've never really gotten deeply into it.

-Michael Chrichton is certainly noteworthy.
Ugh.  Ugh.  and Ugh.  :-D

Well, that's enough for now. I look forward to perhaps SOME degree of 
extrapolation, and/or expansion on the subject of Science Fiction In 
General
Well, how about these authors.  Have you read any of them?

Robert Heinlein (Stranger in a Strange Land, Starship Troopers, Time Enough 
for Love, etc.,)
Iain Banks (Culture Series)
Vernor Vinge (I think he's an honorary Bee) (A Deepness in the Sky)
Dan Simmons (Hyperion and Endymion Series)
Kim Stanley Robinson (Mars Series)
Joe Haldeman (Forever War / Forever Peace)
Larry Niven (RingWorld)
Isaac Asimov (Robots / Foundation Series)
Anne McCaffrey (Pern)
Harry Turtledove (How Few Remain)
Douglas Adams (HHGG)

etc., etc., :-)

Jon
GSV Welcome Aboard!
Le Blog:  http://zarq.livejournal.com

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Re: Science Fiction In General...

2003-12-08 Thread Medievalbk
In a message dated 12/8/03 6:19:44 PM US Mountain Standard Time, 
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:

  Christopher Columbus was a short story that shouldn't 
 have been stretched into a novel.
  

And just where. or what when, did he get that telescope?

in false religious voice It's in the book!

William Taylor
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Re: Science Fiction In General...

2003-12-08 Thread Julia Thompson


On Mon, 8 Dec 2003, Travis Edmunds wrote:

 From: Robert Seeberger [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 
 
  
   -Tolkien (I suppose THAT'S just a given)
 
 Whadya think of the movies?
 
 
 I was disappointed in the Two Towers. It deviated too much from the 
 book(something that always aggravates me) The first flick however, was 
 decent.

Interestingly enough, my mother-in-law, who has never read the books and 
isn't likely to, either, was more confused by the first one when she saw 
it in the theater than the second one.

Not sure just what that means or says, but I'm sure it's something.

Julia

brain-fried, still needing to do dinner dishes

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Re: Science Fiction In General...

2003-12-07 Thread Robert Seeberger

- Original Message - 
From: Travis Edmunds [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Saturday, December 06, 2003 1:58 PM
Subject: Science Fiction In General...


 I assume it's only proper to introduce myself, so hello everyone. I'm a
 huge David Brin fan, as well as a fan of sci-fi in general. However, as
for
 Mr. Brins' fellow Killer Bees, I have not read any of their works. That
 being said, plus noticing a lack of sci-fi activity in the recently
 archived messages, I decided to perhaps instigate a general
science-fiction
 discussion.


Howdy stranger!
Where ya frum?



 As I do not as of yet know any of you, nor your tastes in this genre, I
 might as well list the author's that I hold close to my heart.

 -David Brin (as evidenced by this post in the first place)

Obviously! G



 -David Gerrold (Star Trek TOS writer/War Against The Chtorr/and a few
other
 interesting books)


Haven't read him since the 70s.


 -Terry Pratchett (Discworld series. The little things that this man
thinks
 up and transfers to paper are quite outstanding to say the least)

Never read him.



 -Anne Rice (Blurs the line of sci-fi/one of the most captivating and
 talented writers I have ever come across)

!Not! scifi by any stretch.
I've read pretty much all of her books as they were published.

I'm waiting for Blood Canticle to come out in PB.
Just finished Blackwood farm.




 -Arthur C. Clarke (Rama series, that's all I have to say)

I've read a lot of Clarke. He is great!


 -Orson Scott Card (Ender series/the champion of the demigodlol)

I prefer the Alvin I-Got-A-Destiny-To-Fulfill books myself.



 -Ben Bova (Has always held an interest for me, since I read Mars)

Been a long time since I touched a Bova.



 -Steve White (Eagle Against The Starslol Ok, so it's complete B-side
 sci-fi, but it's not without it's merit)

Never heard of him.
?!?!?!?!?



 -Tolkien (I suppose THAT'S just a given)

Whadya think of the movies?



 -Various Star Trek and Star Wars novels tend to find their way into my
 personal library.

If it were up to me TV and film Franchises would be banned from the
bookstores! G



 -I also love the Stargate Universe (For those of you who may share that
 interest)

Grrr..I Luv Farscape



 -Michael Chrichton is certainly noteworthy.

Read most of his.
Just finished Prey also.



 Well, that's enough for now. I look forward to perhaps SOME degree of
 extrapolation, and/or expansion on the subject of Science Fiction In
 General

I'm pretty sure we all love skiffy in general, its the specifics that cause
discussions and debates.G




 MCT

MC Travis?


xponent
Hey Ya Maru
rob


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Re: Science Fiction In General...

2003-12-06 Thread ValdivielsoB
Hello,


In a message dated 12/6/03 5:15:05 PM Eastern Standard Time, 
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:

 
 -Steve White (Eagle Against The Starslol Ok, so it's complete B-side 
 sci-fi, but it's not without it's merit)
  

I happened to like 'Engle Against The Stars', the idea that an alien race 
might show up, mostly peaceful, just wanting to trade, and still screw up the 
Earth.

Better than to come in blasting.

Mike V.

'Love - it's the best way I know to jump start a vomit' - Francine, 
Strangers In Paradise: Brave New World
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RE: Science Fiction In General...

2003-12-06 Thread Jim Sharkey

Travis Edmunds wrote:
I assume it's only proper to introduce myself, so hello everyone.

Hi, Doctor Nick!

-David Gerrold War Against The Chtorr

I read the first couple, and thought they were OK, but the local library didn't have 
them all.

-Terry Pratchett (Discworld series.)

Soul Music is possibly the funniest book I've ever read.  I'd recommend to anyone with 
a love for rock and roll music.

-Orson Scott Card (Ender series)

I finally read Ender's Game for the first time two weeks ago.  I wish I had read it 20 
years ago as a teenager; I thought it was fabulous.  Strangely, I'm glad I *didn't* 
read it ten years ago; as a young adult without children, I think I might not have 
appreciated it as much as I did as a parent.

I look forward to perhaps SOME degree of brextrapolation, and/or 
expansion on the subject of Science Fiction In General

Boy did *you* come to the wrong place.  ;-)  We Brinellers are the Lords of 
Off-Topicness.  But maybe some new blood will correct that a little.

Jim
Welcome Aboard Maru

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Re: Science Fiction In General...

2003-12-06 Thread Steve Sloan II
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

 I happened to like 'Engle Against The Stars'

Didn't she write A _Wrinkle in Time_? ;-)
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Re: Science Fiction In General...

2003-12-06 Thread Travis Edmunds

I happened to like 'Engle Against The Stars', the idea that an alien race
might show up, mostly peaceful, just wanting to trade, and still screw up 
the
Earth.

Better than to come in blasting.

Mike V.
___

I hear you on that score. Especially when considering the fact that most 
sci-fi is quite simply an expansion or a different take if you will, on 
someone else's ideas. Originality is rare. At least Mr. White is honest 
about that fact.

-MCT

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RE: Science Fiction In General...

2003-12-06 Thread Travis Edmunds

Boy did *you* come to the wrong place.  ;-)  We Brinellers are the Lords of 
Off-Topicness.  But maybe some new blood will correct that a little.

Jim
Welcome Aboard Maru
___

Well someone referred me here soI figured I'd give 
it a go.

As for being the Lords of Off-Topicness, well that's just fine. Although 
I'm not quite sure that I'm going to be the catalyst in respect to staying 
on topic. Unless of course someone wants an unofficial mod??? lol

-MCT

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Re: Science Fiction In General...

2003-12-06 Thread Nick Arnett
Travis Edmunds wrote:

...

-David Gerrold (Star Trek TOS writer/War Against The Chtorr/and a few 
other interesting books)
Any idea if David is on-line regularly anywhere these days?  I knew him 
years ago (late '80s, early '90s) in the CompuServe CEFORUM, but haven't 
been in touch in ages.  For a long time, I had no idea he was a writer, 
then Rob Hahn (another old CIS friend I'd love to get back in touch with 
-- he's a DP for feature films, whose friendship got me on the set of 
several movies) told me that he wrote The Trouble with Tribbles.

I will never forget when somebody asked the meaning of BTW as an 
abbreviation on-line.  Whereas I thought it meant by the way, David 
suggested Butter The Weasels.  I wrote to him via his website a month 
or two ago, but perhaps I was mistaken to mention weasels in the 
message; didn't hear back.

Welcome to brin-l.  We never talk about science fiction here. ;-)

Nick

--
Nick Arnett
Phone/fax: (408) 904-7198
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
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Re: Science Fiction In General...

2003-12-06 Thread G. D. Akin
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Travis, welcome to the list.  First rule is Top posting . . . bad!  Oops.


- Original Message - 
From: Travis Edmunds [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Sunday, December 07, 2003 4:58 AM
Subject: Science Fiction In General...


 I assume it's only proper to introduce myself, so hello everyone. I'm a
 huge David Brin fan, as well as a fan of sci-fi in general. However, as
for
 Mr. Brins' fellow Killer Bees, I have not read any of their works. That
 being said, plus noticing a lack of sci-fi activity in the recently
 archived messages, I decided to perhaps instigate a general
science-fiction
 discussion.

I highly recommend you read the other Killer Bees; well worth the time.


 As I do not as of yet know any of you, nor your tastes in this genre, I
 might as well list the author's that I hold close to my heart.

 -David Brin (as evidenced by this post in the first place)

snip

 -Anne Rice (Blurs the line of sci-fi/one of the most captivating and
 talented writers I have ever come across)

Vampires, ugh!

 -Arthur C. Clarke (Rama series, that's all I have to say)

Childhood's End!  Read it!

 -Orson Scott Card (Ender series/the champion of the demigodlol)

Ender's universe is a wonderful creation.

 -Ben Bova (Has always held an interest for me, since I read Mars)

Mars and Return to Mars are both good.  His later Grand Tour stories
are all pretty much the same book over and over; disappointing.

snip
 -Tolkien (I suppose THAT'S just a given)

And How!

snip

 I also love the Stargate Universe (For those of you who may share that
interest)

I, too, am a big fan of SG-1--eagerly awaiting the release of the season 5
DVD next month.

 Michael Chrichton is certainly noteworthy.

I've enjoyed most of his SF-oriented work, but much of it, while good, is
not at the same level of the Killer Bees.

 Well, that's enough for now. I look forward to perhaps SOME degree of
 extrapolation, and/or expansion on the subject of Science Fiction In
 General

Good luck getting ANY degree of extrapolation, and/or expansion on the
subject of 'Science Fiction In General'.  This list holds the land speed
record and will undoubtedly surpass the speed of light in GOING OFF TOPIC.
If you want to talk about babies, dogs, cats, the Great Republican
Conspiracy, the Great Democratic Compiracy, or any other topic, just open a
new thread on SF and watch where it will go.

Again, welcome.

George A

P.S.  I live in Osan Korea.

P.P.S.  I will always answer on topic about SF, for awhile at least.


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