T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
645.1 | | SPMFG1::CHARBONND | I get the top | Tue Jul 05 1988 11:56 | 5 |
| Try "Footfall" by Niven and Pournelle
"Ender's Game" (Orson Scott Card) has a sequel, but stands
well alone. (But I guarantee, you'll *want* to read the
sequel)
|
645.2 | discussed elsewhere | TFH::MARSHALL | hunting the snark | Tue Jul 05 1988 12:01 | 10 |
| I'll repeat my opinion of the best SF book of all time:
_Lord_of_Light_ by Roger Zelazny.
/
( ___
) ///
/
|
645.3 | On the Fantasy side ... | MPGS::BAILEY | May the 4 winds blow u safely home | Tue Jul 05 1988 12:17 | 13 |
| Since you also mentioned fantasy, I have a couple of suggestions.
One I read a few months ago was called (I think...) "Twilight's
Kingdoms" by Nancy Asire. I've never seen anything else by her,
but wish I had.
Another I've read recently that I'd recommend is "Daughter of the
Empire" by Raymond Feist and Janny Wurts. It's a spin-off of the
"Magician" series by Feist, but not directly related to that story.
It stands alone very nicely, and is one of those books I couldn't put
down once I started it.
... Bob
|
645.4 | Shorts | UCOUNT::BAILEY | Corporate Sleuth | Tue Jul 05 1988 13:50 | 5 |
| Don't forget the sf anthologies of short stories and novelettes.
They are nice to have around for quick reading and usually give
the flavor of the author's longer works.
Sherry
|
645.5 | "Single" book actually start of trilogy | TALLIS::SIGEL | | Tue Jul 05 1988 13:57 | 15 |
| Re .3
> Another I've read recently that I'd recommend is "Daughter of the
> Empire" by Raymond Feist and Janny Wurts. It's a spin-off of the
> "Magician" series by Feist, but not directly related to that story.
> It stands alone very nicely, and is one of those books I couldn't put
> down once I started it.
As I understand it, "Daughter of the Empire" is the first book in a
projected trilogy, so is probably not appropriate to this topic, even though
it stands alone fairly well. I wasn't all that impressed with the book,
for all that, and may not bother with the other two unless they hit a local
library during a dry period.
Andrew
|
645.6 | | AKOV11::BOYAJIAN | It's a dream I have | Tue Jul 05 1988 13:57 | 19 |
| While it's true that the majority of the sf books on the racks
today have sequels up the wahzoo, in a lot of cases, reading the
sequels aren't necessary. For instance, though DUNE has five
sequels, one can just read DUNE, get a complete story, and forget
the other books even exist.
THE MOTE IN GOD'S EYE, by Niven & Pournelle, is part of a longer
future history of Pournelle's, but it still stands on its own.
And so on.
Two of my personal favorites in the field don't have sequels or
follow-ups: THE FOREVER WAR by Joe Haldeman and A CANTICLE FOR
LEIBOWITZ by Walter M. Miller (actually, Michael Bishop has written
one novella, "The White Otters of Childhood" and one novel, AND
STRANGE AT ECTABAN THE TREES, that are supposedly set centuries
later in the Leibowitz universe, but the connection is very tenuous).
--- jerry
|
645.7 | | GYPSC::CHISHOLM | Dem Tambourines! | Tue Jul 05 1988 14:26 | 26 |
|
I checked my lists, and these are the best single books I've read
recently, some may not be all that new, it just took me a while
to find them -
A. A. Attanasio In Other Worlds
Greg Bear Eon
Gregory Benford Against Infinity
Robert Brin The Practice Effect
The Postman
Samuel R Delaney Stars in my Pocket like Grains of Sand
Robert L. Forward Flight of the Dragonfly
Mary Gentle Golden Witchbreed
Colin Greenland The Hour of the Thin Ox
Joe Haldeman Dealing in Futures (shorts)
Brian Jacques Redwall
Donald Kingsbury Geta
Ellen Kushner Swordspoint
Ursula K. Le Guin Always Coming Home
Kim Stanley Robinson The Memory of Whiteness
I like both Hard SF and Fantasy so there is a good mix.
Cheers... Doug.
|
645.8 | I wish it WAS a series | NOETIC::KOLBE | don't grow nuclear plants | Tue Jul 05 1988 14:57 | 3 |
|
I still list "SHARDS OF HONOR" as a great single book, it's by
Lois McMaster Bujold. liesl
|
645.9 | here's two I think deserve mention | CSC32::S_LEDOUX | Evolution here I come! | Tue Jul 05 1988 15:03 | 6 |
| Two long time favorites:
MACROSCOPE............Piers Anthony
AVATAR................Poul Anderson
Scott
|
645.10 | | SNDCSL::SMITH | TANSTAAI | Tue Jul 05 1988 16:40 | 7 |
| Flight of the Dragonfly has a sequel (written much later) called
Dragon's Egg, but the first one stands well on it's own...
I'll post a list later....
Willie
|
645.11 | not to mention _Future_Magic_ | TFH::MARSHALL | hunting the snark | Tue Jul 05 1988 17:35 | 15 |
| re .10:
> Flight of the Dragonfly has a sequel (written much later) called
> Dragon's Egg, ...
which has a sequel _Starquake_.
(thus completing the mandatory trilogy?)
/
( ___
) ///
/
P.S. I'll second _A_Canticle_for_Liebowitz_.
|
645.12 | Stardance | USACSB::OPERATOR_DK | | Tue Jul 05 1988 21:04 | 11 |
| Hello all! Im new around here, and an avid SF/Fantasy Fan..
If I were to suggest only one book (w/o a sequel) which is
my favorite, I would HAVE to say:
STARDANCE by Spider and Jean Robinson
EXCELLENT! I only got it a 6 months ago, but Ive already reread
it many times. It is very 60's influenced in its attitudes towards
sex, drugs and government..I strongly recommend it!
-Dan Kachoogian (sometimes known as Lije Baily)
|
645.13 | | MPGS::BAILEY | May the 4 winds blow u safely home | Wed Jul 06 1988 09:18 | 13 |
| RE .7
Perhaps it's just a matter of taste, but I found "In Other Worlds"
by A.A. Attanasio to be one of the worst movels I've read in a long
time. In fact, it was one of the few novels I've started and didn't
finish. I gave my copy away to someone who actually *liked* it.
However, I thoroughly enjoyed, and would recommend, "RADIX" which is
also by Attanasio, and is a stand-alone novel.
I'll second "Eon" by Greg Bear. Wierd ending, but a great story.
... Bob
|
645.14 | | GYPSC::CHISHOLM | Dem Tambourines! | Wed Jul 06 1988 10:38 | 18 |
|
re .10,.11
I've read 'Dragons Egg' ans 'Starquake', but don't remember
them being related to 'Flight of the Dragonfly', totally
different worlds. In the UK 'Egg' came out before 'Flight',
was it the same mission? the same humans?.
And now that I think on it 'Stars in my Pocket...' will have
a sequel.
re .last
Yup, must be, I liked 'Radix' also, but not quite as much.
Cheers... Doug.
|
645.15 | A couple more | ATSE::KASPER | Biology grows on you | Wed Jul 06 1988 11:57 | 12 |
|
Hmm, no one has mentioned "The Stars My Destination" by Alfred Bester,
discussed at length elsewhere in this conference.
"Web of the Chozen" is one of the few stand-alone novels Jack Chalker
has written. It's no classic, but I found it enjoyable light reading.
I'll also second the suggestion of collections of short stories.
Beverly
|
645.16 | Huh? | BENTLY::MESSENGER | An Index of Metals | Wed Jul 06 1988 13:59 | 13 |
| re: .10
>Flight of the Dragonfly has a sequel (written much later) called
>Dragon's Egg, but the first one stands well on it's own...
"Flight of the Dragonfly" is standalone (the only connection it
has to "Dragon's Egg" is that one of the characters *reads* it as
an S/F novel...)
"Dragon's Egg", however, does have a sequel called "Starquake" which
was written much later :-)
- HBM
|
645.17 | OOPS! | SNDCSL::SMITH | TANSTAAI | Wed Jul 06 1988 14:14 | 6 |
| I knew I was confused! Sorry, "Dragonfly" _is_ a good standalone,
"Starquake" is a sequel to "Dragon's Egg". That's what I get for
spouting off without checking my list....
Willie
|
645.18 | another single | IJSAPL::ELSENAAR | Wandering... Wondering... | Wed Jul 06 1988 14:50 | 3 |
| "Masters of the maze" by Davidson. It's fantasy, it's truly remarkable.
Arie
|
645.19 | Mote in God's Eye | RBW::WICKERT | MAA DIS Consultant | Wed Jul 06 1988 15:12 | 6 |
|
Personally I'd second the vote for "The Mote in God's Eye". One
of my favorite books of all time.
-Ray
|
645.20 | Sequelitis Anyone? | MORGAN::SCOLARO | A keyboard, how quaint | Wed Jul 06 1988 15:14 | 4 |
| A sequel to "The Mote in God's Eye" has been written and will soon
be out in hardcover.
Tony
|
645.21 | One of my Favorites | PSG::PURMAL | I will kiss the girl from Venus | Wed Jul 06 1988 17:29 | 3 |
| The Disposessed by U. K. LeGuin
ASP
|
645.22 | One More One Chalker... | ANKH::KIRSCHBAUM | Insert Something Clever Here | Wed Jul 06 1988 18:07 | 3 |
| Another good one shot by Jack Chalker is _Dancers in the Afterglow_.
Andy...
|
645.23 | | AIAG::LUTZ | | Wed Jul 06 1988 18:19 | 10 |
| "Lord of Light" by Roger Zelazny
"The Computer Connection" by Alfred Bester (which I saw in paperback
only once, bought it, and have never seen again)
And, for the Chalker fans, I'd recommend "The Devil Will Drag You
Under"
Scott L.
|
645.24 | More books | OASS::MDILLSON | Mike Dillson DTN 435-5325 | Wed Jul 06 1988 20:57 | 2 |
| As long as we're discussing Niven & Pournelle, how about _Lucifer's
Hammer_ or _Dream Park_ (with Steve Barnes).
|
645.25 | some more suggestions | ARCANA::CONNELLY | It's turtles all the way down! | Thu Jul 07 1988 00:55 | 18 |
|
As long as we're mentioning Bester, what about _The Demolished Man_?
And LeGuin's _The Left Hand of Darkness_ is also one of the best (she
has a number of novels which share the same universe but which are not
really connected in any other important way).
In a more rambunctious and melodramatic vein, there's Charles Harness's
_The Paradox Men_.
And Arthur C. Clarke has _The City and the Stars_, one of his better
elegiac novels.
As far as I can remember, _Earth Abides_ was George Stewart's only
science fiction novel.
That's only five. There must be many more (in addition to the initial
volumes in series--like _Dune_--that stand on their own).
|
645.26 | | AKOV11::BOYAJIAN | It's a dream I have | Thu Jul 07 1988 05:19 | 64 |
| An important point to remember, which I brought up in my previous
note) is that when one talks about a "series", there are really
three different animals involved:
(1) The multi-volume novel
(2) The series
(3) A Future History or Common Universe
These are (generally speaking) in descending order of connectivity.
In the case of (3), the connectivity is really just a sharing of
a common background universe. Otherwise the novels stand on their
own as single novels. All of the books in Niven's Known Space
series, for instance, stand on their own. Each can be read without
having read any of the others (the one possible exception is RING-
WORLD ENGINEERS, which would make much more sense if one's read
RINGWORLD already, but I don't think even this is essential).
Other examples of this are LeGuin's Hainish novels (THE LEFT HAND
OF DARKNESS, THE DISPOSSESSED, et alia), Poul Anderson's Polseo-
technic History (THE PEOPLE OF THE WIND, the Van Rijn/Falkayn
books, the Dominic Flandry novels, et alia), and Jack Vance's
Alastor Cluster/Gaen Reach novels (TRULLION: ALASTOR 2262, THE
GALACTIC EFFECTUATOR, THE GRAY PRINCE, et alia).
Generally, what distinguishes (2) from (3) is that in the case of
(2), each book tends to pick up pretty much from where the previous
one leaves off, and they tend to (though certainly not always) follow
the same character or group of characters. In these cases, it's
almost certain that the first novel in the series is readable as
a stand-alone novel, and quite often, the successive volumes are
also readable stand-alone, though they tend to make more sense if
the earlier books have been read already. Examples might be Asimov's
Robot/Empire/Foundation series, Dickson's Childe Cycle, and Vance's
Dying Earth series.
Case (1) is the bitch. LORD OF THE RINGS is an obvious example,
as is Gene Wolfe's THE BOOK OF THE NEW SUN. Most often, you can
tell this because they are labelled "trilogies", when indeed they
are no such thing.
[As a matter of fact, I can think of only two genuine trilogies in
all of science fiction and fantasy. The first is Blish's "After
Such Knowledge" -- DOCTOR MIRABILIS (which actually isn't sf in
itself), BLACK EASTER/THE DAY AFTER JUDGEMENT (which have always
been published separately, but they are actually two halves of one
book), and A CASE OF CONSCIENCE. The second is Mary Stewart's
Merlin Trilogy: THE CRYSTAL CAVE, THE HOLLOW HILLS, and THE LAST
ENCHANTMENT. I would, though, entertain arguments for some others,
such as the original three Dragonriders of Pern novels by McCaffrey,
Lewis's "Space Trilogy", and LeGuin's "Earthsea Trilogy". If we
allowed films, I would make a definite case for the Mad Max Trilogy.
Every other "trilogy" is either a three-volume novel, such as LORD
OF THE RINGS, or a series that just happens to have three novels in
it, such as Jones' Colossus series.]
At any rate, the fact that a book is part of a series doesn't
necessarily mean that it can't be read on its own. A book being
flagged as part of a series is mostly just a marketing gimmick on
the part of the publishers. The hard part is telling the difference
between (1), (2), and (3).
--- jerry
|
645.27 | Oldies but Goodies... | NOT001::ALLEN | MICHELLE @NOT 7-778-3125 | Thu Jul 07 1988 05:41 | 9 |
| No one has mentioned:-
_The Gods Themselves_ by Isaac Asimov
_The Moon Is A Harsh Mistress_ by Robert Heinlien
Regards,
Michelle
|
645.28 | | SNDCSL::SMITH | TANSTAAI | Thu Jul 07 1988 11:07 | 5 |
| One of my long_time_favorites is Blish's "Cities In Flight", which
is a rather large book with 3(?) parts, but I don't know that they
were ever published separately...
Willie
|
645.29 | ecclectic delights | ASIC::EDECK | this space for rent | Thu Jul 07 1988 11:36 | 12 |
|
Somebody mentioned the '60s, which reminded me of one of my favorites--
_(Through?) A Scanner Darkly_by Philip K. Dick. Dick also wrote
a few others which have a common theme (_VALIS_, _Radio Free Albamuth_
[that can't be the right spelling...)], combining SF with Gnosticism
(!). Both are quite good on their own (if you're into
Gnosticism...:-) )
Short stories? _Burning Chrome_ by Gibson...anything by Cordwainer
Smith...
|
645.30 | Rise to power... | SANS::WILLARD | NETsupport Maint. Mgr., Atlanta | Thu Jul 07 1988 16:50 | 6 |
|
I liked a somewhat older one called _Sovereign_ by hmm... M. D.
sombody I can't remember ( I do that well). Interesting story which
I found similar to the first Piers Anthony space tyrant but better.
|
645.31 | | AKOV11::BOYAJIAN | It's a dream I have | Fri Jul 08 1988 01:39 | 12 |
| re:.28
CITIES IN FLIGHT has definitely been published as separate books
(four, by the way). In fact, it wasn't until circa 1970 that they
were published in omnibus form. The individual books are:
(1) THEY SHALL HAVE STARS (a.k.a. YEAR 2018!)
(2) A LIFE FOR THE STARS
(3) EARTHMAN, COME HOME
(4) THE TRIUMPH OF TIME (a.k.a. A CLASH OF CYMBALS)
--- jerry
|
645.32 | *Any* Spider Robinson! | THRUST::CARROLL | | Fri Jul 08 1988 10:02 | 13 |
| Someone did mention _Star_Dancer_, but I have to add: anything,
anything, anything by Spider Robinson. You just can't go wrong
there, but the best ones are: Mindkiller and Telempath.
A number of his books are collections of short stories, including
Antinomy (out of print, but if you can find it, it's much better
than the partial re-do in Melancholy_Elephants) and Callahan's,
which is only sort of science fiction, and is a series.
And by the way, if anyone has any idea when Robinson is coming out
with a new novel, I'd love to know...
Diana
|
645.33 | And Other Brunner as Well | DRUMS::FEHSKENS | | Fri Jul 08 1988 12:04 | 5 |
| Can it be possible that no one's mentioned John Brunner's "Stand
on Zanzibar?"
len.
|
645.34 | Definately Spider Robinson! | SNDCSL::SMITH | TANSTAAI | Fri Jul 08 1988 15:31 | 6 |
| I have to agree with that "Diana Carroll" person, whoever she is
:+). Anything at all by Spider Robinson (with the possible exception
of "Night Of Power"). Stardancer (with Jeanne) is in my list of
top 10....
Willie
|
645.35 | I Loved these books | RAVEN1::TYLER | Try to earn what Lovers own | Sat Jul 09 1988 05:29 | 9 |
| The one that comes to my mind is "Starman Jones". I don't remember
the author but if someone else does, please imput it. Its looks
like it might be just another post-nuclear story. But it takes some
very interesting twists.
"The Universe Between" is another one of my faves. And "The Mercy
Men" will keep you wondering whats going to happen next. The authors
to these I don't recall either. But they are worth the reading.
Spirit
|
645.36 | Some good reading by classic authors ... | MPGS::BAILEY | May the 4 winds blow u safely home | Mon Jul 11 1988 12:42 | 11 |
| Some less recent works also come to mind. Although loosely related to
the "Foundation" series, Asimov's books, "The Currents of Space", "The
Stars, Like Dust" and "Pebbles in the Sky" are all good reading, and
are all complete novels unto themselves.
Also, Clarke's "Rendevous with Rama" (rumoured to have a sequel at some
time in the future) is an excellent story and stands alone very nicely.
Other Clarke favorites that are stand-alone are "Childhood's End" and
"Songs of Distant Earth".
... Bob
|
645.37 | Most Heinlein is great! | SNDCSL::SMITH | TANSTAAI | Mon Jul 11 1988 13:36 | 5 |
| "Starman Jones" is the name of a Heinlein 'juvenile' novel (I hate
the label 'juvenile'!), but doesn't have anything to do with
post-nuclear anything, maybe there's another...
Willie
|
645.38 | MERCY MEN author | MAGES::BURR | | Mon Jul 11 1988 14:24 | 3 |
| I believe the author of MERCY MEN is Alan Nourse.
Rod Burr
|
645.39 | Heinlein & Nukes | OASS::MDILLSON | Mike Dillson DTN 435-5325 | Mon Jul 11 1988 16:08 | 3 |
| I'm not sure, but I think the only Heinlein novel to do with
post-nuclear living is _Farnham's Freehold_. I know he has some
shorts about it, but I think that's the only novel.
|
645.40 | | BPT::MOREAU | Of Mice and Menus | Mon Jul 11 1988 17:18 | 35 |
| My wife also doesn't have a lot of time to read, and therefore doesn't want to
get into a book with lots of sequels. A while ago she asked me if there was
anything good in my fairly extensive collection of SF and fantasy. Knowing
that what I gave her had to be top-notch, and couldn't give her a bad
impression of SF&F, I picked the following:
SF - "Citizen of the Galaxy" by Heinlein. In my opinion by far the best of
a very strong collection of juvenile SF novels. After this one I
would place "The Star Beast" and "Have Space Suit Will Travel".
After these would come things like "The Deep Range" by Clarke, and
"The Ship Who Sang" by McCaffery. Also, if the person likes adventure
type novels, with a lot of action (and where the scientific accuracy
can be taken with a grain of salt), try the Lensman novels by E. E.
Smith ("Gray Lensman" is the best stand-alone novel), or most of Colin
Kapp's earlier work (such as "The Chaos Weapon" or "The Survival Game").
Fantasy - "Dragonsbane" by Barbara Hambly. To me this is the best of the
'realistic fantasy' novels that I have ever read. (By realistic
fantasy I mean that you start with a few very basic assumptions,
such as that magic works and dragons exist, and then everything
else is as close to this reality as you can make it. Therefore, I
don't consider Tolkein to be realistic fantasy. Great fantasy yes,
realistic fantasy no).
Notice that I would *NOT* recommend any of Heinlein's later works (anything
including "Starship Troopers" and later). This is not to say I don't think
they are excellent works, I do. But there are elements in them which might
get in the way of a new-comers enjoyment of SF&F, and which would distract
someone from a discussion of the qualities and features of SF&F.
I would also not recommend any Tolkein, or any of Hambly's other works,
because of the restriction about sequel-itis.
-- Ken Moreau
|
645.41 | | AKOV11::BOYAJIAN | It's a dream I have | Tue Jul 12 1988 02:31 | 6 |
| re:.38 re:.35
Yes, the author of THE MERCY MEN (*and* THE UNIVERSE BETWEEN) is
Alan Nourse (pronounced "nurse").
--- jerry
|
645.42 | Thanks for repsonse | AQUA::OCONNOR | The law dont want no gear-gammer | Wed Jul 13 1988 11:34 | 12 |
| Wow, I didn't expect quite this much response, although it has
helped to jog my memory quite a bit. I tend to think of sequel
books as books written in the same universe, the best example of
this is in for Anderson's Ensign Flandry stuff, which is good but
when someone is starting to read sf the idea of reading many books
too get the whole story can be duanting. Another book that is duanting
is "Stand on Zanzibar", although I read it many times and enjoyed
it, I can't reccomend that book to a berginner. Also I believe
it too has a sequel "The Sheep look Up"?
Anyway thanks for the memory jog
Joe
|
645.43 | Brunner Theme | DRUMS::FEHSKENS | | Wed Jul 13 1988 12:08 | 10 |
| "The Sheep Look Up" is not a sequel to "Stand on Zanzibar", it's
a separate and distinct work with much the same flavor. See also
"The Jagged Orbit", another of Brunner's future-bummers. "The Sheep
Look Up" sort of takes the prize for dystopias, though.
Could we possibly trick someone into rolling up everything that's
been recommended into a single list?
len.
|
645.44 | | AKOV11::BOYAJIAN | It's a dream I have | Thu Jul 14 1988 03:36 | 15 |
| re:.42
Yes, it certainly *is* daunting to feel that you have to read a
large number of books to get the "whole" story, but in many
cases where the connecting thread is merely a background universe,
msot of the books can be read on their own. There is something
of a "larger" story that can be absorbed by reading all of the
books, but that's another thing entirely.
As Len said, THE SHEEP LOOK UP is not a sequel to STAND ON
ZANZIBAR, though it is often referred to as such. It can be
argued that these two, plus THE JAGGED ORBIT, form a thematic
unity, but that's stretching it a bit.
--- jerry
|
645.45 | Radiation + Animal = Mutant | RAVEN1::TYLER | Try to earn what Lovers own | Thu Jul 14 1988 03:58 | 9 |
| RE: past notes
Starman Jones story is about a young boy that is trying to be like
his father. And it tells about his adventures to become the "Star"
bearer of his tribe. The story goes into detail to explain the reason
there are so many mutants around. Thats how I deduced it was after
a nuclear blast.
Ben
|
645.46 | May I butt in? | SCOMAN::BOURGAULT | | Thu Jul 14 1988 06:26 | 27 |
|
Re: Starman Jones -
The book you're talking about is NOT "Starman Jones", by
Robert Heinlein. Starman Jones is about a boy that wanted
to be a spaceman, like his uncle that was a navigator on
a spaceship. With some help and misadventures, he fakes
the paperwork and spaces as a cargo handler... until the
big misadventure, and he gets to be a navigator.
The book that you are (I believe) thinking about is
"Starman's Son", also titled "Daybreak - 2250 A.D.",
by Andre Norton. The boy in question had trained to
become a Star Man, but was not accepted because he
was a mutant (marked by white hair). He exiled
himself, with his (large) cat companion, and had
a number of adventures in a "U.S. east coast after the
war" country. There are a number of hints that this
is after a (nuclear) war - his hiking past the remains
of an armored column (tanks, trucks, etc.), having to
go through an area with no vegetation, and comments
about having to avoid "blue" cities (easy to spot -
they glow blue at night...).
Does this clear things up?
- Ed Bourgault -
|
645.47 | not mentioned | NPOGRP::STOLOS | | Mon Jul 18 1988 18:01 | 9 |
| Nova by Sam R Deleney
Norstrailia by cordwainder smith
Man in a high castle by P K Dick
Do androids dream of electric sheep or under the title of
Blade Runner by P K Dick
The end of eternity by I Asimov
The End Of Time by Olaf Stapleton, it includes Starmaker and Last
and First Men, not possible for a series he covers EVERYTHINGS
in these novels.
|
645.48 | | AKOV11::BOYAJIAN | Copyright � 1953 | Tue Jul 19 1988 00:03 | 14 |
| re:.47
Well, I would second the recommendation for all of the books you
list (except perhaps DO ANDROIDS DREAM OF ELECTRIC SHEEP?, which
I couldn't slog my way through). But, given the conditions of
the request, two of those don't count as "single novels":
NORSTILIA is part of a larger series about the Instrumentality of
Mankind.
THE END OF ETERNITY has been retroactively made part of Asimov's
Robots/Empire/Foundation series.
--- jerry
|
645.49 | Here's a few of my personal favorites! | SNDCSL::SMITH | TANSTAAI | Tue Jul 19 1988 22:09 | 113 |
| As promised, my list of single novels (though the definition is
kind of fuzzy, do you count collections of short stories about the
same character which were previously published but have now been
collected in a single book a novel or not?) culled from the list
of books in my library: These are the ones I would recomend!
[Book type (NOVEL), ISBN, and comment fields have been removed to
make the list fit in 80 collumns, the original list is 132 wide..]
Willie
-----------------------------------
Asimov, Isaac Pebble In The Sky
Asimov, Isaac The Currents Of Space
Asimov, Isaac The Gods Themselves
Bova, Ben Kinsman
Brackett, Leigh The Long Tomorrow
Bradley, Marion Zimmer Survey Ship
Brin, David The Postman
Brunner, John The Shockwave Rider
Brunner, John The Crucible Of Time
Brunner, John The Sheep Look Up
Brunner, John Stand On Zanzibar
Bryant, Edward Phoenix Without Ashes
Caraker, Mary Seven Worlds
Clarke, Arthur C. A Fall Of Moondust
Clarke, Arthur C. Rendezvous With Rama
Clarke, Arthur C. The Songs Of Distant Earth
Delaney, Joseph H. Valentina, Soul In Sapphire
Dickson, Gordon R. Spacepaw
Farmer, Philip Jose' The Cache
Haldeman, Joe The Forever War
Harrison, Harry Bill, The Galactic Hero
Harrison, Harry Star Smashers Of Galaxy Rangers
Harrison, Harry One Step From Earth
Harrison, Harry Make Room, Make Room
Heinlein, Robert A. I Will Fear No Evil
Heinlein, Robert A. Stranger In A Strange Land
Heinlein, Robert A. Friday
Heinlein, Robert A. The Moon Is A Harsh Mistress
Heinlein, Robert A. Glory Road
Heinlein, Robert A. Citizen Of The Galaxy
Heinlein, Robert A. Double Star
Heinlein, Robert A. Farnham's Freehold
Heinlein, Robert A. Starship Troopers
Heinlein, Robert A. Orphans Of The Sky
Heinlein, Robert A. The Door Into Summer
Heinlein, Robert A. The Day After Tomorrow
Heinlein, Robert A. The Puppet Masters
Heinlein, Robert A. Beyond This Horizon
Heinlein, Robert A. Starman Jones
Heinlein, Robert A. Have Space Suit - Will Travel
Heinlein, Robert A. Between Planets
Heinlein, Robert A. The Star Beast
Heinlein, Robert A. Rocket Ship Galileo
Heinlein, Robert A. Time For The Stars
Heinlein, Robert A. Space Cadet
Heinlein, Robert A. The Rolling Stones
Heinlein, Robert A. Red Planet
Heinlein, Robert A. Podkayne Of Mars
Heinlein, Robert A. Tunnel In The Sky
Ing, Dean Pulling Through
Knight, Damon C.V. [Sea Venture]
Martin, George R.R. Tuf Voyaging
McCaffrey, Anne The Ship Who Sang
McKinley, Robin Beauty
Morressy, John The Questing Of Kedrigern
Morris, Janet and Chris The 40 Minute War
Niven, Larry The Patchwork Girl
Niven, Larry World Of Ptavvs
Niven, Larry Protector
Niven, Larry A Gift From Earth
Niven, Larry The Integral Trees
[well, OK, "The Smoke Ring" is a sequel, but just
read this one and ignore the other!]
Niven, Larry The Long Arm Of Gil Hamilton
Norton, Andre Daybreak - 2250 A.D.
Palmer, David R. Emergence
Piper, H. Beam The Cosmic Computer
Piper, H. Beam Space Viking
Pohl, Frederik The Years Of The City
Pournelle, Jerry The Mote In God's Eye
Pournelle, Jerry King David's Spaceship
Pournelle, Jerry Exiles To Glory
Pournelle, Jerry High Justice
Pournelle, Jerry Footfall
Pournelle, Jerry Oath Of Fealty
Rand, Ayn Anthem
Robinson, Spider Mindkiller
Robinson, Spider Telempath
Robinson, Spider Stardance
Ryan, Thomas J. The Adolescence Of P-1
Sheckley, Robert The Journey Of Joenes
Silverberg, Robert Time Of The Great Freeze
Simak, Clifford D. City
Smith, George O. The Complete Venus Equilateral
Stasheff, Christopher A Wizard In Bedlam
Stewart, George R. Earth Abides
Stoutenburg, Adrien Out There
Sucharitkul, Somtow Mallworld
Swanwick, Michael In The Drift
Varley, John Millennium
Vinge, Joan D. The Outcasts Of Heaven Belt
Vinge, Vernor The Peace War
[again, I don't care that it's a prequel, read it and
ignore "Marooned In Real Time"!]
Watt-Evans, Lawrence With A Single Spell
Watt-Evans, Lawrence The Misenchanted Sword
White, James The Dream Millennium
Wyndham, John The Day Of The Triffids
Zahn, Timothy Spinneret
Zelazny, Roger Roadmarks
|
645.50 | | AKOV11::BOYAJIAN | Copyright � 1953 | Wed Jul 20 1988 03:03 | 8 |
| re:.49
Again, it depends on how you define "single books". At least
one-sixth of the books you list are parts of series. Generally,
they are only such because they are part of a common universe
with other books, but...
--- jerry
|
645.51 | | FRAGLE::MACNEAL | Big Mac | Wed Jul 20 1988 17:09 | 22 |
|
> THE END OF ETERNITY has been retroactively made part of Asimov's
> Robots/Empire/Foundation series.
> --- jerry
Where does it fit in? Isn't this one the one about time travel?
Asimov's Robots/Empire/Foundation does not deal in time travel.
Asimov's own list of stories included in the Robots/Empire/Foundation
series (see 377.30) does not include THE END OF ETERNITY. Regardless,
the book stands very well on its own and has no sequel or prequel that
I am aware of.
I don't agree with lumping similar universe stories into the category
of series. Quite a few authors develop a universe and write stories
about it. I can't see how a good stand alone novel which may take
place in the universe of another stand alone novel by the same author
would be intimidating to someone who doesn't want to get involved in a
series. It may peak the interest of the reader enough to read other
works, or it may turn them off, but reading those other works is not
required to enjoy the initial work.
|
645.52 | yes; it became part of the Foundation mythos _when written_. | MARKER::KALLIS | Anger's no replacement for reason | Wed Jul 20 1988 17:37 | 22 |
| Re .51 (Jerry):
Ah, all the reading!
>Where does it fit in? Isn't this one the one about time travel?
>Asimov's Robots/Empire/Foundation does not deal in time travel.
But if you recall, at the conclusion of TEOE, Noys explained to
Andrew that the development of time travel cost humanity the stars
(interstellar space-travel technology came too late, and that by
the time humanity reached the stars, other species had overrun the
inhabitable planets). To get humanity out to the stars, the people
she came from (on the other side of the Barrier) were going to do
an alteration by introducing atomic energy to Man early -- through
careful data fed to the nuclear scientists. This would result,
according to their projections, in a galaxy-wide (human) empire,
with a high probability of a radioactive Earth in the process; but
Mankind would spread to the stars. Thus, it "fits" at the very
beginning -- before _Pebble In the Sky_, and before even the Robot
books.
Steve Kallis, Jr.
|
645.53 | | AKOV11::BOYAJIAN | Copyright � 1953 | Wed Jul 20 1988 18:20 | 15 |
| re:.51
As far as common universe stories = or =/= series, I agree with
you, but if you'll read the original request, and some of the
follow-ups, you'll see that the person requesting would be put
off a bit by, say, PROTECTOR, if he sees that it's part of a
larger series of books, whether they are only thinly connected
or not.
As for Asimov, unless I've lost it (my mind, that is) completely,
one of the recent books (forget which one, dammit) did have a
reference that tied TEoE in with the rest of them. I wish I could
remember what it was.
--- jerry
|
645.54 | Foundation's Edge | RACHEL::BARABASH | SPARC == Sun Proprietary ARChitecture | Thu Jul 21 1988 12:22 | 8 |
| > As for Asimov, unless I've lost it (my mind, that is) completely,
> one of the recent books (forget which one, dammit) did have a
> reference that tied TEoE in with the rest of them. I wish I could
> remember what it was.
Foundation's Edge -- refers to the Eternals as an old legend.
-- Bill B.
|
645.55 | I made a boo boo | RAVEN1::TYLER | Try to earn what Lovers own | Mon Jul 25 1988 05:17 | 7 |
| RE: .46
I stand corrected. You are right! It was Starman's Son.
Thanks
Ben
|
645.56 | Is this any better? | SNDCSL::SMITH | Fezzik, tear his arms off. | Mon Jul 25 1988 22:21 | 64 |
| OK, in response to an incredible volume of mail I've received about
my previous reply, I'll shorten the list a bit...
All right, that's as far as I can cut it down! These are my top
ten favorite single novels!
Asimov, Isaac Pebble In The Sky
Bova, Ben Kinsman
Brackett, Leigh The Long Tomorrow
Brin, David The Postman
Brunner, John The Shockwave Rider
Brunner, John The Sheep Look Up
Bryant, Edward Phoenix Without Ashes
Clarke, Arthur C. A Fall Of Moondust
Clarke, Arthur C. The Songs Of Distant Earth
Delaney, Joseph H. Valentina, Soul In Sapphire
Haldeman, Joe The Forever War
Harrison, Harry Star Smashers Of Galaxy Rangers
Heinlein, Robert A. I Will Fear No Evil
Heinlein, Robert A. Friday
Heinlein, Robert A. The Moon Is A Harsh Mistress
Heinlein, Robert A. Glory Road
Heinlein, Robert A. Citizen Of The Galaxy
Heinlein, Robert A. Double Star
Heinlein, Robert A. Starship Troopers
Heinlein, Robert A. Orphans Of The Sky
Heinlein, Robert A. The Door Into Summer
Heinlein, Robert A. The Day After Tomorrow
Heinlein, Robert A. The Puppet Masters
Heinlein, Robert A. Starman Jones
Heinlein, Robert A. Have Space Suit - Will Travel
Heinlein, Robert A. Rocket Ship Galileo
Heinlein, Robert A. Space Cadet
Heinlein, Robert A. The Rolling Stones
Heinlein, Robert A. Tunnel In The Sky
Knight, Damon C.V. [Sea Venture]
Martin, George R.R. Tuf Voyaging
Niven, Larry Protector
Niven, Larry A Gift From Earth
Niven, Larry The Integral Trees
[well, OK, "The Smoke Ring" is a sequel, but just
read this one and ignore the other!]
Niven, Larry The Long Arm Of Gil Hamilton
Palmer, David R. Emergence
Piper, H. Beam The Cosmic Computer
Pournelle, Jerry King David's Spaceship
Pournelle, Jerry Exiles To Glory
Pournelle, Jerry Footfall
Pournelle, Jerry Oath Of Fealty
Rand, Ayn Anthem
Robinson, Spider Mindkiller
Robinson, Spider Telempath
Robinson, Spider Stardance
Sheckley, Robert The Journey Of Joenes
Smith, George O. The Complete Venus Equilateral
Stasheff, Christopher A Wizard In Bedlam
Stewart, George R. Earth Abides
Stoutenburg, Adrien Out There
Varley, John Millennium
Vinge, Vernor The Peace War
[again, I don't care that it's a prequel, read it and
ignore "Marooned In Real Time"!]
Wyndham, John The Day Of The Triffids
Zahn, Timothy Spinneret
|
645.57 | more on what it takes to make a series | ARCANA::CONNELLY | It's turtles all the way down! | Mon Jul 25 1988 23:39 | 24 |
| re: .50
> Again, it depends on how you define "single books". At least
> one-sixth of the books you list are parts of series. Generally,
> they are only such because they are part of a common universe
> with other books, but...
I'm not sure that just being part of a common universe should count
as making a set of books be considered a series. I would say you
need at least one of the following as well:
A) continuity of plot (either in the sequel or "prequel" sense)
B) continuity of characters (ditto--and this could include direct
descendants or ancestors)
C) continuity of setting coupled with an overriding thematic
conception or contrivance
In addition, the putative SECOND book in a series should have been written
within seven years of the first book in order to render the first book
unqualified to stand on its own merits as a "single book", and that second
book should meet the criteria stated above without regard to subsequent
books for continuity.
By this convention, the Foundation books and Helliconia books meet criterion C.,
the Dune books and Amber books meet criterion B., and the Lord of the Rings
books meet criterion A. (I think.)
Pc.
|
645.58 | Good one | COMET::TIMPSON | Ten Billion Butterfly Sneezes | Tue Jul 26 1988 09:18 | 5 |
| RE .56
If you have Ayn Rand Listed you should include "Atlas Shrugged"
Steve
|
645.59 | | OPUS::BUSCH | | Tue Jul 26 1988 14:40 | 17 |
| Re Note 645.57 -< more on what it takes to make a series >-
< A) continuity of plot (either in the sequel or "prequel" sense)
< B) continuity of characters (ditto--and this could include direct
< descendants or ancestors)
< C) continuity of setting coupled with an overriding thematic
< conception or contrivance
< By this convention, the Lord of the Rings books meet criterion A. (I think.)
I'd say that the Hobbit/LotR books meet all of the above criteria. However, The
Hobbit could stand alone, as could the Lord of the Rings. For one thing, there
is a difference in style and content between the two. The Hobbit is written
almost as though it were being told to children as a bedtime story, as indeed it
began. There are times when JRRT speaks directly to us in an aside.
Dave
|
645.60 | Any Joanna Russ novel | NYEM1::RDAVIS | Ray Davis | Tue Jul 26 1988 21:00 | 5 |
| She's only written one series (some short stories with a novel),
and it's conveniently packaged in one fairly small paperback (_The_
_Adventures_of_Alyx). I would avoid her short story collections
and one "straight" (boy, is THAT in quotes!) novel - the SF novels
are all challenging and well-written, though.
|
645.61 | A Sentient Machine-Independant Program?! | ATSE::KASPER | Kilroy occupied these coordinates | Tue Jul 26 1988 23:04 | 9 |
|
Buried in the long list in .-? is a book worthy of separate mention:
"Valentina, Soul in Sapphire" by Delaney. An interesting look into a
possible future for the hackers among us (not me, I just write the
stuff). I enjoyed it mostly as a character study.
Beverly
|
645.62 | Good things in BIG packages. | RAIN::WELCH | | Thu Jul 28 1988 15:32 | 21 |
| This one might not fit if the reason you're looking for a stand-
alone novel is time-shortage, but it was one of my all time favorites.
(I read it when it first came out in paperback.)
Ok, here it comes. Now don't get too angry ...
How about Battlefield Earth by L. Ron Hubbard???
I know it's a thousand pages long, but dammit, I wish he had
written a sequel! I read the thing in three days. Good stuff.
For Asimov fans, he compiles *several* collections of short
stories. Some of them border right on the edge of science theory
rather than SciFi - anything from the technically almost believable
to wacky stuff that is pure imagination. I think most were written
by other authors, but if he likes 'em, what the hell, I'll read
it!
Was Foundation originally meant as a trilogy? By the time I
read it (I'm only 17 - *gasp*) the next two were already out.
Do read Battlefield Earth.
-John-
|
645.63 | | AKOV11::BOYAJIAN | Copyright � 1953 | Thu Jul 28 1988 18:13 | 17 |
| re:.62
No, FOUNDATION was not originally meant as a trilogy. It was intended
as a long series of stories that would emcompass the thousand-year
interregnum between the First and Second Empires. The material in
the "trilogy" originally appeared as a series of stories in ASTOUNDING
SCIENCE FICTION, and the only reason they are considered a trilogy
is because they happened to conveniently fall into three volumes.
Asimov stopped where he was because he grew tired of the series,
not to mention that he disliked having to re-read the extant stories
everytime he began a new one, just to keep them consistent. He picked
the series back up only under pressure from his publisher and fans
(much in the same way that Conan Doyle was "forced" to bring Sherlock
Holmes back from the dead).
--- jerry
|
645.64 | midcourse correction, as it were | MARKER::KALLIS | Anger's no replacement for reason | Fri Jul 29 1988 11:06 | 11 |
| Re .63 (Jerry):
>Asimov stopped where he was because he grew tired of the series,
>not to mention that he disliked having to re-read the extant stories
>everytime he began a new one, just to keep them consistent.
Also, he had some problems with the publisher of the first three
volumes, Gnome Press. He picked up the series again after conditions
were such that Doubleday could publish the remainder.
Steve Kallis, Jr.
|
645.65 | | AKOV11::BOYAJIAN | Copyright � 1953 | Fri Jul 29 1988 11:51 | 18 |
| re:.64
Well, yes and no. The final serial that was written and published
in ASTOUNDING in 1949, whereas his problems with Gnome didn't
manifest themselves until a few years later.
The explanation I gave was told to me by Isaac himself, back when
he was living in the Boston area and used to show up semi-regularly
at NESFA meetings. I was writing a paper on him for a high school
English class at the time, and talked to him briefly about the FT
(part of the paper was to be a critical analysis of one of the
subject's major works, and I picked the FT).
Isaac was tickled when I told him later that I got an A+ on the
paper. I still have that paper around somewhere, but when I read
it again a few years back, I was embarrassed at how bad it was.
--- jerry
|
645.66 | Pohl,Heinlein,Leiber | CSOA1::GIRI | | Sun Aug 07 1988 16:14 | 12 |
| I haven't gone thru all the replies to this note, so excuse me if
this is a repetition,
I would recommend,
1. Man Plus by Fredrik Pohl
2. Double Star by Robert Heinlein (I am not sure of the title)
3. Gather Darkness by Fritz Leiber
Sampathgiri.
|
645.67 | Did somebody Mention...? | MTADMS::POKORNY | | Thu Aug 11 1988 13:58 | 7 |
| SINCE someone mentioned Niven and Pournell, I'll add two of my favorite
sf books.
The Mote in God's Eye
Lucifer's Hammer
Both by Niven and Pournelle, both single books. N. and P. are a
great team, they come up with some of the most interesting ideas
in *HARD* sf. but not at the exspense of good writing.
|
645.68 | Look! A nit! | SNDCSL::SMITH | Macrotechnology! | Thu Aug 11 1988 15:03 | 4 |
| Umm, Niven and Pournelle just finished The Moat Around Murcheson's
Eye, I guess the moties finally broke thru the cordon....
Willie
|
645.69 | WHEN? | SSDEVO::BARACH | Reincarnate Tasha Yar! | Thu Aug 11 1988 16:08 | 5 |
| Really? Is it out?
_The Mote in God's Eye_ has always been one of my favorite books.
=ELB=
|
645.70 | Dunno the details, I'll wait for the paperback | SNDCSL::SMITH | Macrotechnology! | Fri Aug 12 1988 13:41 | 5 |
| Well, I do remember Jerry Pournelle mentioning that he had finished
it (within the last month) so if it's not out yet it ought to be
RSN!
Willie
|
645.71 | finished .nes. availability | DOOBER::MESSENGER | Intrusion Countermeasures Electronics | Fri Aug 12 1988 14:23 | 10 |
| When Dr. Pournelle announces that something is finished and when
you can get it are frequently two different things.
He announced that they had completed 'Footfall' about 4 months before
you could get it anywhere (and I was beating the bushes).
Geez, we at DEC wouldn't know wnything about this phenomenon --
after all, V5.0 just went straight to SDC right after field testing
(/SARCASM_MODE).
- HBM
|
645.72 | | AKOV11::BOYAJIAN | Copyright � 1953 | Fri Aug 12 1988 16:10 | 16 |
| When a book is finished has got little to do with when it appears
in the bookstores. The publishers have schedules that they
endeavor to follow. If a book is scheduled for, say, January 1989,
it makes no difference when it's finished (unless it's *very*
late :-)).
Besides, what is "finished"? Dotting the last "i" and crossing the
last "t" in the manuscript? Making the last revision requested by
the editor? Approving the galleys for the first time? Telling the
copy editor for the nth time that dammit, you really *did* mean
to say "octopusses" and not "octopi" in chapter 3?
Depending on which one of those Pournelle meant, it could be anywhere
from four months to a year and a half before the book hits the stores.
--- jerry
|
645.73 | Dreams of Flesh and Sand | LEZAH::BOBBITT | invictus maneo | Tue Aug 23 1988 13:19 | 10 |
| A book I read recently - and LOVED was by a fairly new author named
W.T. Quick. It's called "Dreams of Flesh and Sand". It's kind
of a cross between a bladerunner futuristic world, and the analogs
to real life that "people" experience when they enter the computer
realm - like Tron only much better.
Lots of suspense, and very few people do what you expect them to.
-Jody
|
645.74 | | SPMFG1::CHARBONND | Mos Eisley, it ain't | Wed Aug 24 1988 13:41 | 1 |
| "Becoming Alien" by Rebecca Ore
|
645.75 | The list is the next reply | DOOLIN::HNELSON | | Thu Jun 21 1990 15:09 | 9 |
| In my quest for summer reading, I was referred to this note, and did my
usual bit -- collating it into a single list (yer're welcome, Len).
The big find seems to be Robinson... I'll have to go look for a topic
devoted to this new (to me) author.
Thanks for the referral and recommendations.
- Hoyt
|
645.76 | Those mentioned to date | DOOLIN::HNELSON | | Thu Jun 21 1990 15:10 | 124 |
| In "mentions" then alpha order, e.g. "Mote" got three mentions.
3 Niven and Pournelle "The Mote in God's Eye"
3 Robinson "Star Dancer"
2 Asimov "Pebble In The Sky"
2 Bear "Eon"
2 Brin "The Postman"
2 Delaney "Valentina, Soul in Sapphire"
2 Haldeman "The Forever War"
2 Heinlein "Double Star"
2 Heinlein "The Moon Is A Harsh Mistress"
2 Heinlein "Have Space Suit Will Travel".
2 Heinlein "Citizen Of The Galaxy"
2 Miller "A Canticle for Liebowitz"
2 Niven and Pournelle "Lucifer's Hammer"
2 Robinson "Mindkiller"
2 Robinson "Telempath"
2 Zelazny "Lord of Light"
1 Anderson "Avatar"
1 Anthony "Macroscope"
1 Asimov "The Currents of Space"
1 Asimov "The Stars, Like Dust"
1 Asimov "The Gods Themselves"
1 Asimov "The End of Eternity"
1 Asire "Twilight's Kingdoms"
1 Attanasio "In Other Worlds"
1 Benford "Against Infinity"
1 Bester "The Demolished Man"
1 Bester "The Computer Connection"
1 Bester "The Stars My Destination"
1 Blish "Cities In Flight"
1 Bova "Kinsman"
1 Brackett "The Long Tomorrow"
1 Brin "The Practice Effect"
1 Brunner "Stand on Zanzibar"
1 Brunner "The Shockwave Rider"
1 Brunner "The Sheep Look Up"
1 Bryant "Phoenix Without Ashes"
1 Bujold "Shards Of Honor"
1 Card "Ender's Game"
1 Chalker "Dancers in the Afterglow"
1 Chalker "The Devil Will Drag You Under"
1 Clarke "A Fall Of Moondust"
1 Clarke "Childhood's End"
1 Clarke "Rendevous with Rama"
1 Clarke "Songs of Distant Earth"
1 Clarke "The City and the Stars"
1 Clarke "The Songs Of Distant Earth"
1 Clarke "The Deep Range"
1 Davidson "Masters of the maze"
1 Delaney "Stars in my Pocket like Grains of Sand"
1 Deleney "Nova"
1 Dick "A Scanner Darkly"
1 Dick "Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep"
1 Dick "Man in a High Castle"
1 Feist and Wurts "Daughter of the Empire"
1 Forward "Flight of the Dragonfly"
1 Gentle "Golden Witchbreed"
1 Gibson "Burning Chrome"
1 Greenland "The Hour of the Thin Ox"
1 Haldeman "Dealing in Futures"
1 Hambly "Dragonsbane"
1 Harness "The Paradox Men"
1 Harrison "Star Smashers Of Galaxy Rangers"
1 Heinlein "Starman Jones"
1 Heinlein "The Day After Tomorrow"
1 Heinlein "Tunnel In The Sky"
1 Heinlein "The Star Beast"
1 Heinlein "Space Cadet"
1 Heinlein "I Will Fear No Evil"
1 Heinlein "Starship Troopers"
1 Heinlein "Friday"
1 Heinlein "Orphans Of The Sky"
1 Heinlein "The Door Into Summer"
1 Heinlein "The Rolling Stones"
1 Heinlein "Glory Road"
1 Heinlein "Rocket Ship Galileo"
1 Heinlein "The Puppet Masters"
1 Hubbard "Battlefield Earth"
1 Jacques "Redwall"
1 Kapp "The Chaos Weapon"
1 Kapp "The Survival Game"
1 Kingsbury "Geta"
1 Knight "C.V. [Sea Venture]"
1 Kushner "Swordspoint"
1 LeGuin "Always Coming Home"
1 LeGuin "The Left Hand of Darkness"
1 LeGuin "The Disposessed"
1 Leiber "Gather Darkness"
1 Martin "Tuf Voyaging"
1 McCaffery "The Ship Who Sang"
1 Niven "A Gift From Earth"
1 Niven "Protector"
1 Niven "The Long Arm Of Gil Hamilton"
1 Niven "The Integral Trees"
1 Niven and Pournelle "Footfall"
1 Niven and Pournelle and Barnes "Dream Park"
1 Nourse "Mercy Men"
1 Ore "Becoming Alien"
1 Palmer "Emergence"
1 Piper "The Cosmic Computer"
1 Pohl "Man Plus"
1 Pournelle "Exiles To Glory"
1 Pournelle "Oath Of Fealty"
1 Pournelle "Footfall"
1 Pournelle "King David's Spaceship"
1 Quick "Dreams of Flesh and Sand"
1 Rand "Anthem"
1 Rand "Atlas Shrugged"
1 Robinson "The Memory of Whiteness"
1 Sheckley "The Journey Of Joenes"
1 Smith "Gray Lensman"
1 Smith "Norstrailia"
1 Smith "The Complete Venus Equilateral"
1 Stapleton "The End Of Time"
1 Stasheff "A Wizard In Bedlam"
1 Stewart "Earth Abides"
1 Stoutenburg "Out There"
1 Varley "Millennium"
1 Vinge "The Peace War"
1 Wyndham "The Day Of The Triffids"
1 Zahn "Spinneret"
|
645.77 | Ayn Rand | EXIT26::STRATTON | Playing golf with Eric Clapton | Sat Jun 23 1990 12:45 | 3 |
| re .76 - if you read and like the Ayn Rand books (or any
Rand), check out the Objectivist conference at
ELRIC::OBJECTIVISM.
|