T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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1097.1 | some | LABRYS::CONNELLY | Round up the usual suspects! | Wed Aug 19 1992 22:48 | 7 |
|
Would Olaf Stapledon's stuff be an example? Also some of Arthur C. Clarke?
The Carl Sagan first novel (i forget what it was called).
"And, of course," Frank Herbert's _Destination: Void_. ;-)
paul
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1097.2 | | TECRUS::REDFORD | | Wed Aug 19 1992 23:50 | 10 |
| Carl Sagan's first (and only, as far as I know) SF novel was
called "Contact", and definitely counts for metaphysical SF.
Others you might look for are anything by Jorge Luis Borges
(particularly "Labyrinths") and Stanislaw Lem (particularly "The
Cyberiad" or "The Futurological Congress", very funny). The
command
Notes> sh key <name> /full
can point you to more info on them. /jlr
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1097.3 | | CUPMK::WAJENBERG | Patience, and shuffle the cards. | Thu Aug 20 1992 10:00 | 34 |
| Re .0:
These titles and authors don't match well with the examples you give,
but they fit the description you give for "metaphysical/philosophical
SF":
The Cyberiad by Stanislaw Lem
(Comical short stories about robots, computers, mind, and reality)
The "Space Triology" by C. S. Lewis:
Out of the Silent Planet
Perelandra
That Hideous Strength
(SF or fantasy depending on your theology, definitely about
human nature and fate, God, heaven, and hell, with ETs thrown in)
The novels of Charles Williams:
The Greater Trumps
Many Dimensions
Descent into Hell
The Place of the Lion
Shadows of Ecstasy
All Hallows' Eve
(Not an easy author to read, but VERY metaphysical in subject
matter)
"The Warhound and the World's Pain," by Michael Moorcock
(about a Renaissance mercenary sent out by Satan to seek the
Holy Grail as a move toward surrender terms to God)
"Past Master" by R. A. Lafferty
(almost slapstick metaphysical space opera)
Earl Wajenberg
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1097.4 | Orson Scott Card puts a lot of thought in his books | RAGS::GINGRAS | | Thu Aug 20 1992 10:37 | 21 |
| I'm starting the third Ender book by Orson Scott Card, 'Xenocide',
and I must admit that I'm really hooked on these.
The first two books are 'Ender's Game' and 'Speaker For the Dead'.
These books have enough action to keep them rolling, and plenty of
suspense/mystery, but their captivating quality is in their examination
of politics, religion, and philosophy.
There are enough thought-provoking themes in the trilogy to keep a
discussion going a long time. Card works in the gray areas between
good and evil, black and white. There is a re-occurring theme in
'Speaker' that opposites in race or religion can come to live together
and respect each other through understanding. When walls (or fences)
are built between them, there is little understanding and disasters
can occur. This is something the human race will never seem to
comprehend.
BTW, I thought that Card's writing improved between Ender's Game and
Speaker for the Dead. I'm just starting Xenocide, so I'm anxious to
see if he's gotten even better.
_Marty
|
1097.5 | Well, you've already included some fantasies... | KUKRI::pierson | Another day, another windmill | Thu Aug 20 1992 16:05 | 5 |
| "Moonwise" by Greer Ilene Gilman
Dark and mysterious, remiscent of Gormenghast and Infinity Concerto
"Neverness" by David Zindel
Uneven, but the best parts are very good.
|
1097.6 | | TINCUP::XAIPE::KOLBE | The Dilettante Debutante | Thu Aug 20 1992 20:50 | 8 |
| Hi Chuck, I really liked Kathleen O'Neal's Treasure Of Light series. I just
can't remember the names. I can bring the books in to work if you're interested.
I also have several others at home that might qualify but I'll have to check
titles. The memory goes first. :*)
I enjoy reading books that go into the nature of god and explore the demensions
of the soul. I tend to dislike black/white good/evil characters and prefer
shades of grey with interesting moral dilemmas. liesl
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1097.7 | More (literary) matters metaphysical... | CHEFS::BARK | | Fri Aug 21 1992 08:36 | 25 |
| David Lindsay's "A Voyage to Arcturus" is about as weird and
metaphysical as you can get (if you can find it). The science is er,
ideosyncratic (the hero flies to Arcturus in a spaceship powered by
backward light rays).
Brian Stableford's "The Werewolves of London" and "The Angel of Pain"
are, I think specifically described by the author as "Metaphysical
Scientific Romances" (and are the first two volumes in a trilogy).
John Crowley's work is fairly metaphysical and deals quite a bit with
"paradigm shifts" and the nature of reality, although he is probably
too "magic realist"for your tastes. "Little, Big" is his classic work,
but you could try "Great Work of Time" which applies chaos theory to
multiple time lines and paradoxes and is considerably shorter (a
Battam novella)
Christopher Priest played about with the nature of reality in "Inverted
World" (a "(very, very) big planet" novel) and "The Affirmation" (a
post-modernist psychological novel with SF bits)
Ursula Le Guin's "The Lathe of Heaven" is pretty metaphysical too.
Hope this helps, though some of these books may not be easy to find.
|
1097.8 | | CUPMK::WAJENBERG | Patience, and shuffle the cards. | Fri Aug 21 1992 10:13 | 29 |
| Oddly enough (considering his reputation as a "rivets" type), several of
Arthur C. Clarke's stories are pretty "metaphysical":
"Childhood's End" (an SF Buddhist UFOlogist eschatology)
"The City and the Stars" (how to wrap up human history)
"Expedition to Earth" (a short story, also anthologized under that
title)
The 2000 etc. series, though I liked the movies better...
Here are a couple more by R. A. Lafferty, both, like "Past Master,"
rather apocalyptic, and both hard to find, I'm afraid. Both involve
more or less ordinary guys (each with some strange aces in strange
holes) up against a Conspiracy Against the World.
"The Devil is Dead"
"Fourth Mansions"
Also:
"Black Easter" & "The Day After Judgement" by James Blish (fantasy set in
the modern world about black magicians vs white as their conflicts
would "really" work under the premises of Christian theology and
western occultism)
"A Case of Conscience" by James Blish (about a space explorer who is
also a Jesuit priest, wondering if the aliens they've discovered
are Edenically innocent or machinations of the devil)
Earl Wajenberg
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1097.9 | | ESGWST::RDAVIS | Blue devils for a brown study | Fri Aug 21 1992 12:56 | 20 |
| The most perfect Crowley novel is "Engine Summer" -- very hard to find,
very much worth the effort.
Check out Joanna Russ's novels, particularly "The Female Man", "We Who
Are About To...", and "The Two of Them".
Karen Joy Fowler has two superb collections of short stories and a
superb first-contact / historical novel / Western novel, "Sarah
Canary".
James Morrow's "Only Begotten Daughter" and (can't remember the
author)'s "Good News from Outer Space" are pop-theological romps somewhat
along the lines of "Stranger in a Strange Land".
In the older stuff, you might look into Edgar Pangborn and Theodore
Sturgeon.
More back at home, I'm sure...
Ray
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1097.10 | time | TINCUP::XAIPE::KOLBE | The Dilettante Debutante | Fri Aug 21 1992 13:25 | 7 |
| I checked my shelves and and found another. "Borrowed Time" by Alan Hruska. Don't
know if he ever did another.
This covers love and souls and time travel. One of the best time travel stories
I've ever read. If it's not still in print you can borrow my copy. It's great
having some Colorado noters here. Now we can finally share like the crowd back
east! liesl
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1097.11 | | EBBCLU::CRIPPEN | | Fri Aug 21 1992 14:13 | 11 |
|
How about Heinlein's "Job: A Comedy of Justice". It seems to me that
it fits your description. Some others that come to mind are:
"Strength of Stones" by Bear (?)
"The Forge of God" and "Anvil of Stars" by Pohl (?)
"Nightfall" by Clark (?)
Sorry for the questions on authors, but I'm terrible with names.
Stu
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1097.12 | These themes are present in a lot of SF | SSAG::JSLOVE | J. Spencer Love; 237-2751; SHR3-2/W28 | Fri Aug 21 1992 16:51 | 59 |
| By metaphysics, do you mean religion, the nature of man, the nature of reality,
the hidden assumptions that color our world view, other things, or some
combination of the above? Does it have to be hard to read?
For a romp in this space, how about "The Practice Effect" by (I think) David
Brin?
"The Witches of Karres" (James Schmitz, I think) is another humorous effort in
this space.
Many things by Alice Sheldon (James Tiptree, Jr.). Very subtle -- or at least
oblique -- feminism in some cases, but other issues concerning how point of
view affects the nature of reality.
Alfred Bester's "The Stars My Destination" (earlier version, "Tiger, Tiger").
A prototype of cyberpunk before the metaphysics were mined out. There is
another story, entitled "Rebirth" (I think) in the same collection where I
usually find the Bester story, don't recall who wrote it, about telepaths and
intolerance, and a third in the collection ("Brain Wave?") that was the first
occurance I've seen of the idea that earth is in an area of the galaxy that
makes people stupid. Two volumes.
*Anything* by Vernor Vinge, but especially "True Names".
Arthur C. Clark's "The Star", a short story (song by Larry Warner).
C. J. Cherryh's Alliance/Union universe, especially "The Pride of Chanur" and
its four sequels, or "The Faded Sun" trilogy. These stories are told about
politics and intrigue, but they are really about the clash of cultures.
Although told about aliens, you can usually find a terrestrial culture that at
least tried out the ideas portrayed.
Zenna Henderson's, "The Book of the People" and "The People, No Different
Flesh". Mostly mined out now, e.g., Mutant series by Karen Haber (?) and
(the first book) Robert Silverberg.
"Camp Concentration". Can't remember the author. A different approach to
intelligence augmentation.
"The Fourth R" by George O. Smith (I think), published later under the title
"The Brain Machine". He had another about the legacy of a genetic engineer
which I can't recall the title of.
"Monument", "All the Colors of Darkness" and sequels, others by Lloyd Biggle,
Jr.
Children's books: "The Mouse and His Child". "Flight to the Mushroom Planet".
There is a trilogy by Rebecca Ore (third book, "Human to Human") which is about
culture shock from many points of view.
"The Great Time Machine Hoax", "Time is the Simplest Thing" and "Way Station"
by Clifford D. Simak. Almost anything by Simak, but these are the ones I liked
most.
This just scratches the surface. If only I were at MITSFS with access to
PinkDex to aid my failing memory instead of in Colorado...
-- Spencer
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1097.13 | Heading for the bookstore now... | BSS::C_OUIMETTE | Don't just do something, sit there! | Fri Aug 21 1992 19:55 | 23 |
| All,
Wonderful! All of the replies are appreciated; I'm going to have
some big reading fun now... Keep 'em coming, I'll also post more if I
can think of any (time to go through my library anyhow..)
I can't believe I left out A.C. Clarke in the base note.... Also, I
would include Frank Herbert's -The Jesus Incident, and The Lazarus Effect.
And Carl Sagan's _Contact_, for me, excellently illustrates what it is
I'm craving. Gimme another one of those; Big Fun!
Re: .3 (I think) - yup, some of the examples (e.g., Ringworld) may not
match the definition posted. I guess I wanted to also include some of
my favourite titles to illustrate my reading tastes... Busted! But I
believe Riverworld qualifies, and was, for me, a very fun read.
Re: -1; If it has to be hard to read, I too will normally pass
(exceptions- some Phillip Dick, Samuel Delaney).
Thanks again,
chuck
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1097.14 | minor correction | CUPMK::WAJENBERG | Patience, and shuffle the cards. | Mon Aug 24 1992 10:20 | 6 |
| Re .12:
(Nit: "The Great Time Machine Hoax" is by Keith Laumer, not Clifford
Simak. At least, Laumer did write a novel by that title.)
Earl Wajenbreg
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1097.15 | | ESGWST::RDAVIS | Twitchy and Screechy | Mon Aug 24 1992 12:27 | 4 |
| "Camp Concentration" was by Thomas M. Disch. His "On Wings of Song"
may count, too.
Ray
|
1097.16 | re .12 (mine) and .14 (kindly correction): oops | SSAG::JSLOVE | J. Spencer Love; 237-2751; SHR3-2/W28 | Mon Aug 24 1992 18:14 | 23 |
| As I said, I have no reference materials here. It's been a while since I
last reread those titles. Sorry about misattributing the author. I do not
withdraw the topical recommandation.
Some older titles by Keith Laumer did play with reality in interesting ways.
Most of his writing is very lighthearted, although he did a collaboration (with
his wife?) called "Earthblood" that was tragic, and his "Bolo" series is much
less of a romp than "Lafayette O'Leary" and "Retief". He used to be on my "buy
immediately even in hardback" list, but I find his more recent work incoherent,
and now *avoid* new books by this author -- too disappointing. (I have heard
rumors that that is due to his health.)
I particularly recommend his "Retief's War".
In the early 60's, (1963?) Laumer wrote what may be the first and last Retief
story (first written, last in story sequence) in one of the magazines (Analog?).
You can find this by going to MITSFS, consulting the magazine index, and
reading short story from the appropriate bound volume (which NEVER leaves the
library). This story (alone of all Retief stories) isn't funny, but it is sort
of on this note topic as it is about honor (why people do things) and makes
Retief a lot less two-dimensional.
-- Spencer
|
1097.17 | Add these to list | KEPNUT::GRENIER | savoirfare is everywhere | Mon Aug 24 1992 18:42 | 16 |
| Julian May has a set of books out that are all about the metaphysical.
in order
THE MANY COLORED LAND
THE GOLDEN TORC
THE NONBORN KING
THE ADVERSARY
A PLIOCENE COMPANION ( encyclopedia on previous 4 books)
THE SURVEILLANCE
METACONCERT
JACK THE BODYLESS
In my opinion these are some of the bests books I've ever read.
Rich
|
1097.18 | | SUBURB::TUDORK | | Mon Aug 24 1992 19:35 | 2 |
| The "Tarot" series by Piers Anthony
|
1097.19 | | TECRUS::REDFORD | | Mon Aug 24 1992 23:28 | 4 |
| re: .9
"Good News from Outer Space" is by John Kessel. Funny in places,
scary in others, and with a veyr subtle alien.
|
1097.20 | | MILKWY::ED_ECK | Rambo Among the Roses | Tue Aug 25 1992 10:01 | 5 |
| ref .12, "Rebirth"
Perhaps a story about an older telepath finding his son is being
prejudiced against nontelepaths by a telepathic broadcast whose
central character is a "green man?" It was by Kuttner.
|
1097.21 | Ian Watson | CHEFS::BARK | | Tue Aug 25 1992 11:59 | 9 |
| Ian Watson's work plays a lot of games with reality:
In "Miracle Visitors" UFO's are "explained" in a variety of ways
including "tulpas" from a higher reality.
In "The Jonah Kit", the discovery of ripples in the background
radiation confirm that our universe is merely a ghost of the real one!
|
1097.22 | re .20: interesting but a different story | SSAG::JSLOVE | J. Spencer Love; 237-2751; SHR3-2/W28 | Tue Aug 25 1992 16:08 | 8 |
| In the anthologized story which I believe is called "Rebirth," the world has
been devastated by what must have been a nuclear war. The story is set in what
is probably a post-holocaust Newfoundland. The society is extremely (and
perhaps justifiably) hostile to mutants. Mutant humans are sterilized and cast
out; mutant plans and animals are simply destroyed. Our protagonists are
secret mutants, because their new ability is not obvious to their observers.
-- Spencer
|
1097.23 | | CUPMK::WAJENBERG | Patience, and shuffle the cards. | Tue Aug 25 1992 16:31 | 5 |
| Re .22:
I think your "Rebirth" is by John Wyndam.
Earl Wajenberg
|
1097.24 | | BAHTAT::LECTER::SUMMERFIELD | Working for Pharoah | Wed Aug 26 1992 04:58 | 3 |
| Re .22:
Also published as The Chrysalids, by John Wyndham.
|
1097.25 | varley's gaea trilogy | OBSESS::GRIFFITH | | Fri Sep 04 1992 12:50 | 8 |
| if you liked "riverworld" and "ringworld", you'll love johne varley's Gaea
series. "Titan", "demon", and "wizard" are exciting, thought-provoking ,and
hunorous. I may be slightly predjudiced, but i think that gaea ranks right up
there for universes that follow different rules and anthropomorphic alien
species. and cirroco jones is one of the most formidible female protagonists
since morgaine. try them.
kirby
|