T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
507.1 | Brin | PROSE::WAJENBERG | | Fri Jul 24 1987 14:37 | 8 |
| I recommend David Brin.
I like Zelazny, but he might not be "hard" enough.
If you haven't read Poul Anderson's Polesotechnic League stories
and the ones about Flandry, you have a rich vein to mine there.
Earl Wajenberg
|
507.2 | Cherryh, Hogan | CAVER::LEAVITT | Eric Leavitt HPS/CAD 297-5221 | Sat Jul 25 1987 12:03 | 11 |
| I'd recomend all of C.J. Cherryh's books. (Did I spell that right?
I know there's an extra h in there somewhere.) "Downbelow Station"
is one of the best. You might try it to see how you like it. Her
stories don't discuss technology and "how things work" as much as
the writers you mentioned, but they tend not to stray too far from
a universe with coherent physics. Her strength is her development
of aliens with fairly non-human characteristics.
James Hogan is often mentioned as one of the best current writers
of "hard" SF. I'm not in love with his work (I like it), but I don't
claim to be a "hard" SF devotee.
|
507.3 | | BEING::POSTPISCHIL | Always mount a scratch monkey. | Sun Jul 26 1987 21:01 | 10 |
| Re .0:
You cannot beat doctors of physics for hard science fiction. I like
Charles Sheffield and Robert Forward. One reviewer said they did not
think Sheffield's simple solution to an orbital mechanics problem was
possible -- even though Sheffield provided equations describing the
orbit in the appendix!
-- edp
|
507.4 | another vote for hogan | VIDEO::TEBAY | Natural phenomena invented to order | Mon Jul 27 1987 11:24 | 2 |
| My vote for "hard" science fiction goes to James Hogan also.
|
507.5 | | ARMORY::CHARBONND | Noto, Ergo Sum | Mon Jul 27 1987 13:22 | 7 |
| Don't forget 'Battlefield Earth" by L.Ron Hubbard.
Also by Poul Anderson :
Tau Zero
The Avatar
Orion Shall Rise
|
507.6 | | AKOV68::BOYAJIAN | I want a hat with cherries | Tue Jul 28 1987 01:28 | 14 |
| re:.2
As for the extra "h" in C.J.'s name, you're both right and not
right. Her actual name is "Cherry", but Don Wollheim (head
honcho of DAW Books) convinced her to add the "h" to make the
name more "exotic".
Frankly, I thought DOWNBELOW STATION was a tremendous bore. I
couldn't get past the first 100 pages. I haven't read anything
of hers since (more out of indifference than anything else).
I thought her BROTHERS OF EARTH was terrific, but everything
else of hers I read I thought was OK at best.
--- jerry
|
507.7 | semi-hard | MUNDIS::CHISHOLM | | Wed Jul 29 1987 10:18 | 5 |
|
Try Joe Haldeman (Forever War, Worlds Trilogy) or Gregory Benford
(Against Infinity, Across the Sea of Suns). Not the best but stll
good stuff.
Doug Chisholm.
|
507.8 | | ICEMAN::RUDMAN | Third on a match. | Sun Aug 02 1987 23:19 | 12 |
| Gee, I must be weird. I liked THE PRIDE OF CHANUR enough to read
the following 2.
As for good old days, I just completed my set of the 3 Starwolf
books by Hamilton. I've been looking for #2 for a long time, as I
liked the stories. Published as THE WEAPON FROM BEYOND, THE CLOSED
WORLDS, and WORLD OF THE STARWOLVES, and later collected as STARWOLF,
they are about a human raised on a heavy G planet of interstellar
pirates (the Starwolves) who wound up an outcast from that group.
3 from 'the good old days'.
Don
|
507.9 | Have the Hoyle's been mentioned? | DSSDEV::WALSH | Teach it... Phenomonology! | Tue Aug 04 1987 15:43 | 26 |
| re .5
Please, I've been trying very hard to forget 'Battlefield Earth".
Anybody want a copy, cheap? I never sell science fiction stories
(Annie's hates me for that), but in this case I'll make an exception.
No, I take that back. I don't hate anyone enough to waste their
time that way.
re .8
I don't think you're weird. I liked PRIDE OF CHANUR quite a bit.
It's just the REST of the series that's a "gods rotting" bore.
re .0
Hard science fiction from new authors is a real toughie. I can
re-recommend Forward and Brin, as well as the "old masters", Asimov,
Heinlein, Clarke and Niven. (My pardons to any old masters that
I've left out.)
You might also try some of the stuff by Fred and/or Geoffrey Hoyle.
Some of their stuff is rather dreadful, but they always get the science
right, and sometimes the story is halfway interesting.
- Chris
|
507.10 | frustration | STUBBI::B_REINKE | where the side walk ends | Tue Aug 04 1987 22:07 | 9 |
| re .9
I like Cherryth but in the middle of what I think was "the Kif
Strikes back" but could have been "chanurs revenge" I said to
myself, if she says "gods rot" one more time I am going to put
this book down and not finish it....she did and I didn't. I did
want to know what happened...but her style really put me off
Bonnie
|
507.11 | Thanks for the suggestions | WARSAW::CHEETHAM | | Tue Aug 11 1987 13:13 | 6 |
| Thanks for the suggestions folks.I now have some ideas.How much
has Forward published?,Ive only seen Dragon's Egg(great book)
published here in the U.K.
Cheers
Dennis
|
507.12 | I liked it | GCANYN::MACNEAL | Big Mac | Tue Nov 24 1987 13:36 | 4 |
| I enjoyed downbelow Station by Cherryh. It is considered one of her
best (didn't it win a Hugo?) and, FWIW, warranted inclusion in Eaton
Press' Science Fiction bookclub. I haven't read anything else by her
that I recall.
|