Slashdot Mirror


Top 10 New Sci-Fi/SF Authors?

Dukebytes asks: "I am looking for the new RAH/Piers Anthony/Roger Zelazny/Weis & Hickman etc..., of the world. I have read just about everything I could find on King Aurthur, all of the Dragon Lance stuff, and all or most of the 'old school' hardcore. I don't know, I have maybe 4000 books at home, most of them Scifi/SF. I am looking for some new stuff. I haven't bought any kind of book other than techie for more than 2 years. I just keep reading the ones that I have over and over and over. What are you guys reading? If it is a series, please list ALL of the books in it!"

45 of 1,163 comments (clear)

  1. The new Piers Anthony? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Funny

    Why would we need another Piers Anthony? He shits out more crap ion one year than any 8 other authors!

    1. Re:The new Piers Anthony? by yossie · · Score: 3, Informative

      My favorite authors, in no particular order, of recent years:

      Greg Egan - well, OK, he is my FAVORITE, by far, of the lot. Permutation City is incredible, Diaspora is fantastic too. Of the lot, Distress is the least well done (only relatively so).

      Wil McCarthy - only read one of his, The Collapsium, but already bought two more - expect them to be equally fun.

      David Brin

      Greg Bear

      Gregory Benford

      Vernor Vinge - A Fire Upon the Deep and A Deepness in the Sky are both great - incredible alians

      Paul J. McAuley - the Confluence trillogy is wonderfully fun to read

      Stephen Baxter - The Time Ships, Ring, etc.. All good

      Enjoy - Yossie

  2. good hard sci-fi stuff by kbs · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I've found a rather good liking for some of Gregory Benford's work. If I'm not mistaken, he's a Physicist, so he approaches his work in the same sort of manner. The characters might not be all that great, and his main characters are almost always University professors who end up facing tenure issues, but it's an interesting read.

    I've also found, for things that are sort of out there philosophically, that Greg Egan is pretty cool. I haven't seen any new books by him recently, but I'd suggest Permutation City, Diaspora, and Quarantine as some interesting things to check out.

    --
    yours,
    kbs
    1. Re:good hard sci-fi stuff by Bondolo · · Score: 3, Informative

      Benford's endings are horrible. Often it seems that things are moving along with the plot and then suddenly the writer hit a deadline so wrote 5 more pages to conclude the book.

      In one case, after 3 books of a series he introduced a tie-in to his other series in the last 2 pages.

      But then again, a good book with a bad ending is better than a bad book any day.

      --
      -- "Most people prefer a popular myth to an unpopular truth"
    2. Re:good hard sci-fi stuff by Ray+Dassen · · Score: 3, Informative

      I've also found, for things that are sort of out there philosophically, that Greg Egan is pretty cool


      AOL on that. On the hard SF front, I also enjoy
      Alastair Reynolds's work (e.g. Revelation space). Other writers I'd recommend are Peter F. Hamilton (in particular the Night's Dawn series - wide-vista space opera with a touch of horror), Allen Steele (Clarke-esque near-future SF), Robert Charles Wilson and on the more slipstreamy side, Michael Marshall Smith and Jeff Noon.

    3. Re:good hard sci-fi stuff by Mandi+Walls · · Score: 4, Informative
      To the "hard sci-fi" list i'd like to add

      Peter Watts - Starfish and Maelstrom

      Eric S. Nylund - Signal to Noise and A Signal Shattered

      Someone else in reply to this post suggested Noon, but I just can't get through his stuff. Anybody wants my mostly unread copy of Vurt, you're welcome to it.

      --mandi

  3. Doh! by Black+Parrot · · Score: 3, Funny


    > What are you guys reading?

    Slashdot.

    --
    Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
  4. Too obvious? by dmah · · Score: 5, Informative

    Neal Stephenson: Cryptonomicon, Snow Crash, Diamond Age.

    1. Re:Too obvious? by jovlinger · · Score: 3, Informative

      The best part of Snow Crash was the nuclear-powered railgun called Reason, because everyone listens to Reason...

      That and rat-thing.

  5. Try New Genres by tealover · · Score: 5, Insightful

    You remind me of a friend. The only books he ever read were fantasy books. That's it. He had no other books in his book shelves. As you can guess, he wasn't exactly the most open minded person in the world (not that I'm calling you close minded). He had the same thing with music. Only listened to heav metal. Wouldn't let anyone play any other type of music.

    But I think you deny yourself some of life's pleasures by narrowly defining your interests. It's ok to like reading Sci-Fi books, but I can tell you that you are missing out on a lot if that's all you read. I don't consider Tech books to be "reading" books so I won't address that.

    --
    -- You see, there would be these conclusions that you could jump to
  6. Try getting out of your genre by Ars-Fartsica · · Score: 4, Insightful
    I used to dabble in scifi until I started hitting the general fiction/nonfiction shelves and found that in general, the quality of writing is much higher when there isn't a pixie or a dragon or a robot on the book's cover.

    Whatgever genre, you can always hit the Amazon editor's picks list (avoid the topsellers lists, its filled with pedestrian crap) or the NY Times book reviews.

    The first step to enlightenment is to be a book snob. Stay away from airport crap (John Grisham, Michael Crichton), and try batting out of your league a bit...you might just expand and learn something.

  7. Neil Gaiman by demi · · Score: 5, Informative

    His books are better than they have a right to be. Don't know about series, but I really enjoyed American Gods, Stardust is a great adult fairy tale, and Neverwhere was the book that got me reading fantasy again after a decade-long break.

    --
    demi
    1. Re:Neil Gaiman by swordgeek · · Score: 4, Informative

      Damn! As soon as I saw the subject, I was going to jump in and recommend Neil Gaiman. However, SOMEONE beat me to it!

      So the best I can do is second it. I'm reading American Gods right now, have read Neverwhere, and have the entire Sandman series of comics. (As a friend said, Gaiman disproves the statement that all 'adult comics/graphic novels' are written by (and for) horny 20-year-olds who never got laid. Neil is simply one of the best authors alive today.

      --

      "People who do stupid things with hazardous materials often die." -- Jim Davidson on alt.folklore.urban
  8. Tad Williams: Great Fantasy AND Sci-Fi by backlonthethird · · Score: 3, Informative

    Tad Williams "Memory, Sorrow, and Thorn" trilogy is probalby the best fantasy I've read, period (apologies to J.R.R.). Dragonbone Chair, Stone of Farewell, To Green Angel Tower are the book titles.

    He also is writing an epic sci-fi cycle called "Otherland." A cross between the Matrix, classic cyberpunk, and Alice in Wonderland. High, High quality.

    more info on his website

  9. Define "new" by gmuslera · · Score: 5, Insightful

    For me Orson Card, Terry Pratchett or Dan Simmons are "new" authors, even if the books I like from them have 10-20 years. You can even discover Isaac Asimov, and like their stuff, and being "new" for you.

  10. Dozois anthologies by Onan+The+Librarian · · Score: 5, Informative

    Gardner Dozois edits a yearly anthology of science fiction that has turned me on to a variety of excellent new (and not-so-new) authors. To name a few whose work I'll read anytime: Lucius Shepard, William Sanders, Michael Swanwick, Robert Reed, Howard Waldrop, Terry Bisson, Ursula LeGuin, Mike Resnick, Kathryn Rusch, Karen Fowler... well, just about anyone he selects. I know there are other interesting yearly anthologies out there, and occasionally I buy one, but I've been purchasing Dozois's every year for the past 8 years. Worth checking out, might even be at your local library.

  11. Vinge, Simmons, Stephenson... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Vernor Vinge rocks:
    A Fire Upon the Deep
    Deepness in the Sky
    (loosely related)

    Dan Simmon's Hyperion/Endymion series (4 books) is excellent.

    Neal Stephenson's Snow Crash and Cryptonomicon.

  12. Internet Top 100 List by chandoni · · Score: 5, Informative

    As much as I hate to do this to the site, check out the Internet Top 100 list. Google it if it's slashdotted.

  13. Analog Science Fiction/Science Fact by caesar-auf-nihil · · Score: 4, Insightful

    If you're looking for the best new SciFi authors, check out Analog. It's a paperback magazine, published monthly (www.analogsf.com), with lots of great SciFi and science fact articles. Sometimes its just a selection of short stores, but you'll also find novellas and serials, some of which have been turned into full published novels. Lots of new authors, as well as few older ones, publish great Science Fiction.

    --
    -When going for broke, go for Ithaca!
  14. My favorite New Sci-Fi author by pogen · · Score: 4, Funny
  15. The last 'new' author I read by drinkypoo · · Score: 3, Informative
    Or at least new to me, was Storm Constantine. At the time I had no idea who she was and I dropped like twenty or thirty bucks on a single-volume trilogy called Wraethu. I think the first book is called something like The Enchantments of Flesh and Spirit, or maybe that's me somehow combining more than one title from the series... Anyway, quite a good read but the characters are a sort of new transhuman third gender so if you're squeamish about that sort of thing, try something else she's written. It's brilliantly depicted and has a lot of depth and is really quite entertaining.

    A Sci-Fi author people tend to miss somehow who I really like is C.J. Cherryh, she's amazingly prolific and has quite a large body of interconnected work. Much like most of the works of McCaffrey, everything takes place in the same slice of reality, which is something I've always enjoyed in a sci-fi author. I started with The Pride of Chanur (first of four? books in a series) and I think the next series I read was Cyteen (a trilogy). 40,000 in Gehenna would be a good step after cyteen... Then run around and fill in with other books :)

    As for people who you shouldn't have missed, and probably didn't, but really ought not: Vernor Vinge, and Walter Jon Williams. WJW has written some fairly trashy cyberpunk (Hardwired) which is basically a stroke-piece in the same way as Snow Crash (but also entertaining in many of the same ways - WJW isn't NEARLY as flowery as Stephenson, which is frequently a good thing) and also a fairly thought-provoking novel called Aristoi which is heavy on the nanotech, and far future. Vernor Vinge is amazing, the first book of his I read was a fire upon the deep; also check out a deepness in the sky.

    Hopefully you've already read everything here; If not, hope this helps. Regardless, for everyone else and posterity, my statements stand.

    --
    "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
  16. Re:Terry Pratchet by happyhippy · · Score: 4, Insightful
    He has almost 30 books. And there are better ones than the Thief of Time.

    I wouldnt recommend which ones to read, as although most can be read without reading any previous ones, its better to read them in order of they were made. Theres some jokes that you will only get if you read them in a previous book first

  17. David Weber by Lechter · · Score: 3, Informative

    I wouldn't call him a "new" author, but he seldom seems to be in the traditional top-10 or 20. Even so, Weber writes excellent books in the military-sci-fi vein. They're seldom "high art" or particularly thought provoking, but the characters are generally pretty good and the stories themselves are fun reads largely due to Weber's approchable style.

    Of his books, I'd recommend the trilogy that begins with The Armageddon Inheritance is a lot of fun. If you like that then you should check out his Honor Harrington Series, which is also excellent

    --
    credo quia absurdum
  18. My recent reading list by pogle · · Score: 3, Informative

    -Peter F Hamilton's Nights Dawn Trilogy

    -George RR Martin's A Song of Ice and Fire series (book 4 coming soon!)

    -Jack Whyte's Camulod Chronicles (Historical fiction on King Arthur's grandparents, very very good)

    -Tom Clancy's Red Rabbit (been reading bits and pieces for months)

    -Robert Jordan's WOT #10, Crossroads of Twilight (his slowest read ever though, and not too good IMO)

    -Terry Goodkind's Sword of Truth series

    -Orson Scott Card's Shadow Puppets, the latest book in the Bean series (Enders Shadow, Shadow of the Hegemon preceeding)
    -Also the rest of Card's Ender series (Ender's Game, Speaker for the Dead, Xenocide, Children of the mind)

    -Neal Stephenson, Cryptonomicon and Snow Crash

    -Search for an online book, The Heretic. Got it from a friend, he said there was free downloads--very cool hacker type book, equates it to spellcasting and such

    -Tolkien's LotR, Silmarillion, etc

    -Anything by Robert Ludlum

    -Clive Cussler novels

    Some of these are oldies, but still good. Not all are fantasy or scifi. I've got a ton of others, but these are all the more recent ones (although in most cases it was re-reading them for the millionth time).

    --
    http://thechubbyferret.net - Ferret pictures and informative links.
  19. good, recent SF by gribbly · · Score: 4, Interesting
    Didn't we have a question like this not so long ago...?
    Anyway:
    • Greg Egan - Permutation City, Diaspora
    • Steven Baxter - Manifold:Time, Manifold:Space
    • David Marusek - check his site
    • Iain M. Banks - Culture series (you want me list them all? What the hell!? You haven't heard of google?

    • There you go!
      grib
    --
    maybe
  20. Lois McMaster Bujold by gorilla · · Score: 4, Informative

    Winner of 4 Hugo's, 2 Nebulas, and oodles of nominations.

  21. Not "new", just better. by Doktor+Memory · · Score: 4, Informative

    I couldn't tell you who the top ten "new" science fiction authors are, but I can tell you one thing: you've been cheating yourself by consuming a lot of churned-out-by-committee crap, one identical "novel" after the other.

    Instead of looking for the next endless, pandering "series" a la Weis & Hickman or (shudder) Piers Anthony, why not investigate some of the actual artists in the field? As about a dozen people above have already pointed out, we have these things called the Hugo and Nebula awards -- we give 'em out every year, and it's usually a safe bet that at least a few of the winners are worth your time to read.

    A few authors and books you owe it to yourself to check out if you actually think you like this genre:

    "A Fire Upon the Deep" by Vernor Vinge
    "White Light" by Rudy Rucker
    "Gun, with Occasional Music" by Johnathan Lethem
    "The Book of the New Sun" by Gene Wolfe (this one's actually part of a "series", but Wolfe is a strong enough writer to make me forgive that)
    "The Shockwave Rider" by John Brunner
    "Hard Boiled Wonderland and the End of the World" by Haruki Murikami
    Any of Harlan Ellison's mid-to-late 1970s short story collections. "Shatterday" is probably the strongest.
    Anything by Thomas Disch (start with "Camp Concentration")
    Everything by Alfred Bester.

    And, god forbid, you could consider reading something other than SF&F occasionally. Non-genre "literature" needn't be a soul-crushing Lit 101 experience: grab a copy of "Love in the Time of Cholera" by Gabriel Garcia Marquez or "Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas" by Hunter Thompson and go to town...

    --

    News for Nerds. Stuff that Matters? Like hell.

  22. Where to start? by Nicholas+Schumacher · · Score: 5, Informative

    Neal Stephenson (Snow Crash, Cyrptonomicon, The Diamond Age)
    Guy Gavreil Key (The Fionavar Tapestry)
    Lois McMaster Bujold (the Vorkosigan books)
    Mercedes Lackey (the Valdemar novels)
    Michael A. Stackpole (Dragoncrown cycle)
    Spider Robinson (the early Callahan books)

    and a must read:
    Terry Pratchett (Diskworld novels)

    Those should keep you busy for a while :-)

    --
    -Nick
    My name is Obi-Wan Kenobi. You killed my master. Prepare to die.
  23. Seriously good sci-fi by yawble · · Score: 3, Informative

    I am also a big sci-fi buff, end up reading about one book/week. My personal favorite is Nancy Kress, she has a serious on geneticlly altered children and how they cope. VERY good stuff.
    Also if you like sci-fi w/ a good sense of humor, try Steven Brust. He has a "Taltos" series thats kinda fantasy, but still damn good. Brust also has some more hard core sci-fi titles, but i'll let you find those on your own ;)

    Robert Asprin is pretty good, but again, hes more of a fantasy tilt. The best place to find new good sci-fi IMHO would be the Issac Asimovs monthly magazine. They have short stories, novellas, and novellettes. Thats where i've found most of the outstanding authors i've come across.
    Happy hunting!

  24. Some authors you might enjoy by Interrobang · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I know how you feel. I own about 2000 books, so there are a lot of times when I go into my local second-hand bookstore and don't find anything I want to read at all. The posters who suggest you branch out have a good point, and I can provide some input as to "Mainstream for Science Fiction Fans" (remember that anthology, "Science Fiction for People Who Don't Like Science Fiction"?)

    Note that some of these authors are not new, but you may not have gotten around to them (or heard of them) yet:

    W.P. Kinsella, Shoeless Joe Comes to Iowa, The Iowa Baseball Confederacy, and If Wishes Were Horses, which are sort of "magic realism" fantasy (no orcs, elves, or swords to be seen!).

    Stephen King, (bear with me!) The Dark Tower series, which is sort of dark, parallel-world fantasy drawn from contemporary popular culture, and not really like anything else King's ever written.

    Tom Holt, Only Human, Snow White and the Seven Samurai, and Ye Gods!, which is sort of similar to Douglas Adams, only with less philosophy and more social skills.

    Douglas Coupland, Girlfriend In A Coma, which is a complete departure from Microserfs.

    Donald J. Skal, Antibodies, a very overlooked little tome on people who want to become machines.

    Frank Norris, McTeague, written in 1899 and has probably one of the scariest endings ever written. Ok, so it's not SF, but it might count as horror, and it's definitely a classic book. I love this book and think it's a really great read. Norris doesn't pull any punches, so it's really gritty without any flowery phrases to be found. :)

    Theme anthologies are also a great way of discovering "new" authors, as are subscribing to SF magazines. But I'm sure you knew that already.

    Adviso: Keep in mind that I'm heavily into Harlan Ellison, Norman Spinrad, Norris, Theodore Dreiser, Stephen King, and Cordwainer Smith (among others), and I despise Tolkien and all the other sappy fantasists who take themselves seriously, so take with the appropriately-sized grain of salt.

  25. Best troll so far this year. by Doktor+Memory · · Score: 3, Interesting

    The mark of a truly excellent troll is that it contains just enough elements of truth to hook the casually unwary. I tip my hat to you, sir or madam as the case may be.

    --

    News for Nerds. Stuff that Matters? Like hell.

  26. SF is not Fantasy by Andy+Social · · Score: 4, Insightful

    If you're using "SF" to refer to Science Fiction, which is the most common breakout, rather than Speculative Fiction, you're missing the boat entirely with the books you have mentioned. Sounds like you want FANTASY books.

    If you are looking for unusual well-written fantasy, check out Storm Constantine. The Wraethu omnibus edition is usually available, and it's a stunning piece of gothic fantasy alternate-reality post-apocalyptic gender-bending writing. Can't get enough hyphens.

    For science fiction work, of course there's Neal Stephenson, and the recently feted Cory Doctorow. You can't go wrong with the classics of Heinlein and Asimov, of course.

    Beyond that, as others have said, try something outside the F&SF realm. Or, if you can't bring yourself to do that, subscribe to Analog, Asimov's or F&SF to get a taste of new authors. Short fiction is like the snack before you dig into a big meaty novel.

    --
    Illegitimi non carborundum
  27. Spider Robinson by kent_eh · · Score: 3, Informative

    For light, fun reading: any of the Calahan's books.
    I also enjoyed the Lifehouse/Deathkiller/Time Pressure series. An intersting, if optomistic future view.
    And finally, Stardancer, co-written with Jeanne Robinson was good for a bit of a mind bending.
    Oh, here's his web site

    --

    ---
    "I can't complain, but sometimes still do..." Joe Walsh
  28. Re:don't forget by rgmoore · · Score: 3, Informative

    And The Big U, which is even earlier than Zodiac and, IMO, even funnier and more interesting. Both Zodiac and The Big U also seem to be from before Stephenson developed his every so annoying tendency to end his novels without wrapping up loose ends decently.

    --

    There's no point in questioning authority if you aren't going to listen to the answers.

  29. Re:Robert Jordan by sjbrown · · Score: 3, Interesting
    I didn't mind the ending, seeing as the last 4 or 5 chapters were the only chapters where something actually happened. Up until that point, Jordan basically reiterated stuff we already knew and described how about 20 Aes Sedai looked or held themselves. It was my least favourite book of the ten.

    Note to Jordan: Your fans would appreciate it if, in the future:
    • stuff actually happens
    • you include glossary entries for minor characters (how am I supposed to remember the difference between Reene, Renna, and Reine, when they were last mentioned in 2 paragraphs 4 books ago?)
    • you wrote faster. Maybe consider hand steriods

    Of course, for all the criticism, I highly enjoy the Wheel Of Time series and would reccommend it.
  30. That High-Pitched Keening Sound You Hear... by RobotRunAmok · · Score: 4, Informative

    ...is dear Roger Zelazny twirling about beneath the ground as a result of being separated by a mere comma from Weiss & Hickman.

    That being said, allow me to throw my support behind the Tad Williams fantasy and SF, mentioned elsewhere, as well as the standalone books by Guy Gavriel Kay: "Tigana," "A Song for Arbonne," and "The Lions of Al-Rassan." These are all self-contained, yet have the "epic" feel that most authors only achieve in trilogies or better. (If I'm not mistaken, it was Kay that was tapped to finished off some Tolkien fragments prior to their posthumous publication; when you read his stuff, you'll understand how he got that gig.) Kay also wrote something called "The Fionavar Trilogy" which I tried and couldn't get through, but which the reviewers said was a modern re-mixing of Arthuriana, so maybe you read it and are familiar with him...

    Even though cyberpunk is so-o-o-o-o 1994, you should probably hit up the Gibson 'Sprawl Trilogy," or at least "Neuromancer."

    Baen Books has just released David Weber's newest Honor Harrington book, "War of Honor," and for the price of the hardback you get the print version, and the entire rest of the series that preceded it on CD-ROM, along with artwork and a bunch of maps and stuff. I highly recommend the series, and supporting Baen's brave and innovative efforts in digital distribution.

    The Goerge R R Martin trilogy (kings... thrones... swords... sump'n like that) is better than most (I've only read the first one so far).

    Look, we could be here for days. "Fantasy and SF" covers a lot of ground. You want to narrow it down to Sword&Sorcery, Cyberpunk, Empowered Lesbian Telepaths, Space Opera, or some other popular sub-niche, we can really get down to brass tacks...

  31. Iain M. Banks -- this time with formatting! by Xeger · · Score: 4, Informative

    MODS AND READERS: Please note that this comment is a duplicate -- the original appears somewhere below, and was posted without formatting because of a slip of the mouse. In that state it was unreadable, so I had no choice but to repost. (When, oh when, will we be able to edit our posts?)

    Despite his wacky first name (just say "Ian"), Banks is really worth a try. He isn't originally a sci-fi author by trade; his first book (The Wasp Factory) was a contemporary novel, but we've seen some of his very best work since he started writing his Culture series of novels. And Iain Banks, even at his worst, is better with prose and with ideas than many sci-fi authors at their best.

    His primary science fiction offering is a series of novels set in the distant future (perhaps 10,000 years from now), chronicling the adventures of humanity's descendents. The Culture is a vast interstellar civilization, a pseudo-anarchic meritocracy comprised of dozens of humanoid and nonhumanoid races -- it's unclear whether homo sapiens were founding members of the Culture, or if they joined the Culture sometime after its development, or even if they exist at all. Members of the Culture are referred to as "human" throughout the books, but Banks follows the panspermia hypothesis, so many of his races share the same basic biochemical and physiological traits.

    The Culture has spread to perhaps 10,000 systems, filling space with planets, starships and Orbitals -- immense, ringworld-like structures that house as many as 100 billion people. In all, the population of the Culture is probably around 500 trillion (that's 5.0x10^14) souls. Of these, a sizeable fraction are plain old biological humans, and the rest of them are digitized people, Minds, or group minds.

    The lifespan of a human is somewhere from 200 to 500 years; Culture citizens, the result of thousands of years of genetic tinkering, could conceivably extend their lives indefinitely. But human existence is seen as a sort of gestation period, and after a few hundred years of life, most biologicals get bored and euthanize. After death, they are converted into electronic form and continue to pursue an active and vigorous life in the collective virtual reality that forms the real meat-and-bones of the Culture.

    Many of the Culture's most powerful citizens are Minds, vast, artificially-created intelligent constructs with dozens or hundreds of threads of consciousness. Typically, any structure or vehicle larger than a personal transport is inhabited by a Mind.

    The Mind doesn't merely control the machine, the Mind is the machine, able to interact with the physical world using its "body" which is the ship, or house, or city, or Orbital, or whatever. Of course, a Mind could also be simultaneously inhabiting a dozen different android "avatars," manifesting itself as a holograph in front of an audience, and corresponding with other Minds in a virtual reality.

    OK, all this is well and good -- but what can you expect from a Banks novel?

    • No strife. Material wealth is meaningless when resources are unlimited. In the Culture, social reputation counts more than money. There is no standard form of money; rather, Minds operate factories in every habitat to provide (quite extensive) basic goods and services for free, and luxuries are traded through the social network.
    • No death. People (and other entities) die in Banks novels, but this is the exception rather than the rule. Despite the fact that nobody is ever in any danger, and would just end up being restored from backup if he were to die, there is still plenty of suspense in a Banks novel -- I can't describe it; you'll just have to read and find out for yourself.
    • Fantastic combat. Banks has a magnificent style when it comes to combat, both space- and ground-based. He runs the whole gamut, from exotic antimatter weapons and computer metaviruses, to simple bladed combat and projectile weapons.
    • Intensely cerebral discourse. Because so many of Banks' characters are hyper-intelligent Minds, you'll often find a few paragraphs of calm discussion between Minds in the middle of an intense combat sequence.
    • Great human characters. Whenever Banks introduces a character, you come to care about the person, his likes and dislikes, his motivations -- even if he's only a minor character. Banks' characters really come alive like no other.
    1. Re:Iain M. Banks -- this time with formatting! by cosmosis · · Score: 3, Informative

      Wow, I posted about Iain Bank early on in this story, see above. But I thought I'd mention it again here. I would love to do more with the site, but I just don't have the time. Here it is, Culture Shock

      Xeger - Nice comprehensive overview of Banks by the Way!

      Planet P Blog - Liberty with Technology.

  32. Sarah Zettel ; James Alan Gardner ; C. S. Friedman by Samrobb · · Score: 3, Informative

    Suprised no one's mentioned them yet...

    Sarah Zettel:

    • Fool's War
    • Playing God
    • Kingdom of Cages

    Highly recommended: Fool's War.

    James Alan Gardner:

    • Expendable
    • Vigilant
    • Ascending
    • Trapped

    Highly recommended: Expendable, Trapped.

    C. S. Friedman:

    • Black Sun Rising (Coldfire book #1)
    • When True Night Falls (Coldfire book #2)
    • Crown of Shadows (Coldfire book #3)
    • In Conquest Born
    • Madness Season
    • This Alien Shore

    Highly recommended: The Coldfire trillogy (fantasy), This Alien Shore (SF).

    --
    "Great men are not always wise: neither do the aged understand judgement." Job 32:9
  33. Iain Banks & The Culture by cosmosis · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Banks isn't entirely new, but he remains largely and undeservedly undiscovered. You can read all about him on my Iain Banks website.

    I would also say that if you have not already read Greg Egan, especially his book, Diaspora, do so. This is first-rank hard sf at its best!

    Planet P Blog - Liberty with Technology

  34. Try a more relevent site? by Xtifr · · Score: 4, Informative

    Why "ask slashdot"? Wouldn't it make more sense to check out some SF related web sites for information and suggestions about SF?

    Now I have an unfair advantage in that I live near not one, but two, high quality stores specializing in SF (Other Change of Hobbit and Dark Carnival, both in Berkeley CA), and I get a lot of recommendations by going in there and looking at their recommended shelves, or asking people who work there what's new and good.

    If you aren't lucky enough to have a good SF bookstore nearby, then you might want to try some SF websites. This year's Hugo voting included the category of web site (a "one-shot" category that I hope will become permanent in future).Locus Online, the Hugo winner, and SF Site, which came in third, are my two favorites. Both are full of book reviews (and author interviews, and links to other interesting sites. (The second place Hugo vote went to the SciFi Channel's website, which is more oriented towards TV and movies than written SF, but still might be worth a look).

    And speaking of awards, the various SF & Fantasy awards are a great place to look for recommendations. Check out the nominee list, not just the winners (it really is an honor just to be nominated), and don't forget to check out other works by the same authors. If you don't like short stories, you should still check out the winners (and nominees) in the short-story categories; they may have written some good novels too. Locus Online (link above) has extensive listings of the major SF awards.

    That said, here's a few authors who have been high on my must-read list recently: Lois McMaster Bujold, David Brin, Orson Scott Card, C. J. Cherryh, Greg Egan, Tom Holt, Guy Gavriel Kay, Nancy Kress, Jane Lindskold[1], Ken McLeod[2], Wil McCarthy (yes, one 'l'), Jack McDevitt, Patricia A. McKillip, Robert Rankin, Allen Steele, Neal Stephenson, and Connie Willis. I probably included a few that qualify as "old school", there, and left out a few thinking they were "old school" that you may never have heard of, but such is life.

    HTH

    [1] Lindskold is an associate of, and collaborated with Zelazny, and is well worth checking out if you like Zelazny, IMO.

    [2] MacLeod is the only SF writer I know of who has mentioned Linux in his SF. Others, most notably Stephenson, have mentioned it in non-fiction writings, but only MacLeod so far has embedded it in his fictional future.

  35. Re:Too many goofs by Wonko42 · · Score: 5, Funny
    Yeah, that totally ruined it for me. After I read that bit, I threw the book at the wall and grabbed the phone to warn my friends not to read it. I bought "cryptonomiconsucks.com" and called in sick to work the next day so I could spend the day putting together a website warning the rest of the world not to read the book as well.

    That weekend, I went to the local Barnes and Noble and picketed in front of the "S" section. I posted several scathing reviews on Amazon.com under various pseudonyms and spent most of Sunday digging up Neal Stephenson's home phone number, after which I prank-called him for a good six hours straight.

    I wrote a letter to my congressman as well, and I strongly urge you to do the same! If we don't fight the rising tide of inaccurate astronomical navigation references in modern science fiction, then who will?

  36. Reading List by VoidEngineer · · Score: 3, Informative

    So, here's my 2 cents worth:

    Jordan, Robert
    Wheel of Time Series
    Books: Eye of the World, The Great Hunt, The Dragon Reborn, The Shadows Rising, The Fires of Heaven, Lord of Chaos, A Crown of Swords

    Herbert, Frank
    The Dune Series
    Books: Dune, Dune Messiah, Children of Dune, God Emporer of Dune, Heritics of Dune, Chapterhouse: Dune, Dune: House Atraides, Dune: House Harkonen, Dune: House Coronin

    Gaiman, Neil
    The Sandman Series
    Preludes and Nocturnes, The Dolls House, Dream Country, Seasons of Mist, A Game of You, Brief Lives, Fables and Reflection, World's End, The Kindly Ones, The Wake

    Rice, Anne
    The Vampire Chronicles
    Books: Interview with the Vampire, The Vampire Lestat, The Queen of the Damned, The Tale of the Body Thief, Memnoch the Devil, The Vampire Armand, Merrick, Blood & Gold, Blackwood Farm

    King, Stephen
    The Dark Tower Series
    Books: The Gunslinger, The Drawing of the Three, The Waste Lands, Wizard and Glass

    Rollings, JK
    Harry Potter Series
    Books: Sorcerer's Stone, Chamber of Secrets, Prisoner of Azkaban, Goblet of Fire, Order of the Pheonix

    Stephenson, Neal
    Books: Snow Crash, Diamond Age, Cryptonomicon

    Dick, Philip
    Books: Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep? The Man in the High Castle, The Dark Haired Girl, Confessions of a Crap Artist, Divine Invasion, Flow My Tears, the Policeman Said, Galactic Pot-Healer, The Game-Players of Titan, Martian Time-Slip, A Maze of Death, Radio Free Albemuth, A Scanner Darkly, The Three Stigmata of Palmer Eldritch, The Transmigration of Timothy Archer, We Can Build You, The World Jones Made

    OLDER / HARDCORE

    Gibson, William
    Books: Neuromancer, Count Zero, Mona Lisa Overdrive

    Brooks, Terry
    The Shannara Series
    Books: The Sword of Shannara, The Elfstones of Shannara, The Wishsong of Shannara, The Scions of Shannara, The Druid of Shannara, The Elf Queen of Shannara, The Talismans of Shannara
    The Landover Series
    Books: Magic Kingdom For Sale -- Sold! The Black Unicorn, Wizard At Large, The Tangle Box, Witches' Brew

    Tolkein, J.R.R.
    Fellowship of the Rings, The Two Towers, The Return of the King, The Hobbit, The Silmarillion, The Book of Lost Tales

    Hubbard, L. Ron
    The Mission: Earth Series
    Books: The Invaders Plan, Black Genesis, The Enemy Within, An Alien Affair, Fortune Of Fear, Death Quest, Voyage Of Vengeance, Disaster, Villainy Victorious, The Doomed Planet
    Also: Battlefield Earth, Dianetics

    Asimov, Isaac
    The Foundation Series
    1600+ other books and articles.

    Wells, H.G.
    The Time Time Machine, The Island of Dr. Monroe, The Invisible Man, The War of the Worlds

    Verne, Jules
    20,000 Leagues Under the Sea, Journey to the Center of the Earth, Around the World in 80 Days

    OTHER

    White Wolf Publishers
    Mage: The Ascension, Vampire: The Masquarade, Wraith: The Oblivion, Werewolf: The Apacolypse, Hunter: The Reckoning
    (I figure that if you're reading DragonLance, that you're also probably playing some D&D or AD&D. If so, you may want to consider switching from TSR to WhiteWolf. I only suggest this because you've asked slashdot for some new reading.)

    1. Re:Reading List by G-funk · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Jordan, Robert
      Wheel of Time Series
      Books: Eye of the World, The Great Hunt, The Dragon Reborn, The Shadows Rising, The Fires of Heaven, Lord of Chaos, A Crown of Swords


      I'm a huge fan of the WOT story and universe, but apart from the last few pages of winter's heart, the last 3 or so books have sucked. It's slow, and has diversified into too many different tales all at once... It's become a soap with magic. Kind of like Night's Dawn but not done as well. The next one is out in a few weeks I think, I hope it picks up the pace.

      --
      Send lawyers, guns, and money!
  37. Some Great Authors... by Matrix2110 · · Score: 3, Informative

    No particular order.

    Neil Stephenson (any book)

    Leo Frankowski (Adventures of Conrad Stargard series)

    Terry Pratchett (Discworld series)

    Simon R. Green (Deathstalker series)

    L.E. Modesitt Jr.(most any book)

    C.S. Friedman (Coldfire Trilogy)

    Laurell K. Hamilton (Anita Blake, Vampire Hunter series)

    Steve Perry (Matador series)

    Orson Scott Card (Ender series)

    Terry Brooks (Sword series)

    Robert Jordan (Wheel of time series)

    Terry Goodkind (Sword of truth series)

    Alan Dean Foster (most any book)

    Eric Frank Russell (most any book)

    Keith Laumer (Retief series)

    Glen Cook (Black company series, Garret, P.I. series)

    Pick up most any book by these authors and you are in for a treat! I included the "old school" authors Russell and Laumer because they tend to get overlooked. I promise you that Hamilton and Goodkind books are almost impossible to put down.

    Cory Doctorow is an impressive newcomer as well with "Down and out at Disneyworld" Located here: (for free!) http://www.boingboing.net/

    Enjoy!