Connor MacLeod wrote:David Weber. Much as I like the series. I think they grossly overrate him. And John Ringo. I've become more of a David Drake fan, though he seems to be much less trumpeted (or is it prolific) than the other two...
Drake is probably more prolific than either. He writes about two books a year and has done so since the eighties. He writes in multiple genres, although he's best known for his military sci-fi.
And he is so much better than Weber and Ringo.
The Excellent Prismatic Spray. For when you absolutely, positively must kill a motherfucker. Accept no substitutions. Contact a magician of the later Aeons for details. Some conditions may apply.
Connor MacLeod wrote:David Weber. Much as I like the series. I think they grossly overrate him. And John Ringo. I've become more of a David Drake fan, though he seems to be much less trumpeted (or is it prolific) than the other two...
I agree with you on Weber. Every single book of his boils down to "soldiers are good and upstanding and noble (except the political appointees). Politicians are evil and corrupt (except the ones who used to be soldiers)."
"So you want to live on a planet?"
"No. I think I'd find it a bit small and wierd."
"Aren't they dangerous? Don't they get hit by stuff?"
SS-GB is better than Fatherland. More on topic I found the premise of Stranger in a Strange Land interesting, but reading it was like having dental & rectal surgery carried out simultaniously.
Bob the Gunslinger wrote:
I'm also surprised that neither Neal Stephenson nor Kim Stanley Robinson has made it into this thread yet. Since I haven't been able to force myself to finish any of their books, I don't think it would be fair of me to rate them.
I cannot, despite multiple attempts, get into either Snow Crash and Cryptonomicon. I read anything and everything, but those two books continue to beat me.
I can see Cryptonomicon, if you're not already a fan it's going to be somewhat irritating, but Snow Crash is pretty easy to get into. How far did you get?
My wife went to Vorbarr Sultana and all I got was this bloody shopping bag.
Zixinus wrote:I can't remember the name.
There was a book about interstellar hippies that ripped our moon apart. They had massive technologies, and one of the aliens fucked one of the protagonists. The alien looked like a catwoman.
Also, by ripping the moon apart, it caused massive tidal waves of enormous destruction.
There was one scene where two soldiers also fucked, but because they were dying and had no way out. It was quite sad in a way.
The book was quite obvious portrayer of hippies. It also had an astronomer that told its audience that he indeed visited other planets.
The book made me hate hippies. Well, at least the irresponcible kind. Destroying a whole living world when there are a dozen of other planets worth destroying and nobody would care about is immoral to say the least.
That's "The Wanderer" by Fritz Leiber. And I wonder how old you were when you read it. Because it appears that most of the fucking plot was lost on you. The Aliens were zipping around in a spaceship the size of a planet, and they were on the run from just about anybody else. Damaging our world was just a side effect of their appearance, and all they wanted to do was warn us, not harm us. Not that any of that matters in the end...
"A human being should be able to change a diaper, plan an invasion, butcher a hog, conn a ship, design a building, write a sonnet, balance accounts, build a wall, set a bone, comfort the dying, take orders, give orders, cooperate, act alone, solve equations, analyze a new problem, pitch manure, program a computer, cook a tasty meal, fight efficiently, die gallantly.
Specialization is for insects."
R.A. Heinlein.
Stephenson is massively, hideously overrated by nerds who like the feelgood nerd fairy-floss he writes... but I wasn't going to be the first to mention it.
PS something happened, and I expressed it in nerd-chic terminology like, say, complex mathematics! INSTANT PROFIT!
Connor MacLeod wrote:David Weber. Much as I like the series. I think they grossly overrate him.
Half way through the series I was rooting for the Republic of Haven because I appreciate the underdog to Manticore's sitting around waiting for the next super-duper-uber missile/EW system. "Deus Ex" isn't something Mr. Weber is afraid of.
Many thanks! These darned computers always screw me up. I calculated my first death-toll using a hand-cranked adding machine (we actually calculated the average mortality in each city block individually). Ah, those were the days.
-Stuart
"Mix'em up. I'm tired of States' Rights."
-Gen. George Thomas, Union Army of the Cumberland
How, exactly, is the Republic of Haven the underdog in the series? If anything that's what Manticore would be given they are the single system power opposing the much larger Republic (hah!) of Haven.
Not that I disagree with the people who say Weber's stuff is overrated. The HH series is (used to be, anyway) a fun read but it's nothing more than (mostly) well done space opera.
You want a truly overrated SciFi novel? Dune.
'Next time I let Superman take charge, just hit me. Real hard.'
'You're a princess from a society of immortal warriors. I'm a rich kid with issues. Lots of issues.'
'No. No dating for the Batman. It might cut into your brooding time.'
'Tactically we have multiple objectives. So we need to split into teams.'-'Dibs on the Amazon!'
'Hey, we both have a Martian's phone number on our speed dial. I think I deserve the benefit of the doubt.'
'You know, for a guy with like 50 different kinds of vision, you sure are blind.'
Batman wrote:How, exactly, is the Republic of Haven the underdog in the series? If anything that's what Manticore would be given they are the single system power opposing the much larger Republic (hah!) of Haven.
Not that I disagree with the people who say Weber's stuff is overrated. The HH series is (used to be, anyway) a fun read but it's nothing more than (mostly) well done space opera.
Sure Haven is bigger. It's also beaten like a red headed stepchild for most of the first half dozen novels while Manticore gets:
1) Powerful new tech and tactics
2) Mary Sue Harrington.
I hear that the Haven actually scores some big wins and threatens Manticore in the later books, but I had lost interest by then.
The Excellent Prismatic Spray. For when you absolutely, positively must kill a motherfucker. Accept no substitutions. Contact a magician of the later Aeons for details. Some conditions may apply.
If you want Mary Sue, read The Apocalypse Troll. It has enough to last several lifetimes.
(It also contains one of the most interesting systems of FTL travel I've ever seen. Apparently Weber figured he had to do something to make up for Mr. and Mrs. Mary Sue.)
Batman wrote:How, exactly, is the Republic of Haven the underdog in the series? If anything that's what Manticore would be given they are the single system power opposing the much larger Republic (hah!) of Haven.
Size is all Haven has. The little guy isn't the underdog if he walks into a knife fight with an Uzi.
Many thanks! These darned computers always screw me up. I calculated my first death-toll using a hand-cranked adding machine (we actually calculated the average mortality in each city block individually). Ah, those were the days.
-Stuart
"Mix'em up. I'm tired of States' Rights."
-Gen. George Thomas, Union Army of the Cumberland
Batman wrote:How, exactly, is the Republic of Haven the underdog in the series? If anything that's what Manticore would be given they are the single system power opposing the much larger Republic (hah!) of Haven.
Size is all Haven has. The little guy isn't the underdog if he walks into a knife fight with an Uzi.
I'm sorry, this isn't entirely accurate. The Republic of Haven has
Many thanks! These darned computers always screw me up. I calculated my first death-toll using a hand-cranked adding machine (we actually calculated the average mortality in each city block individually). Ah, those were the days.
-Stuart
"Mix'em up. I'm tired of States' Rights."
-Gen. George Thomas, Union Army of the Cumberland
Many thanks! These darned computers always screw me up. I calculated my first death-toll using a hand-cranked adding machine (we actually calculated the average mortality in each city block individually). Ah, those were the days.
-Stuart
"Mix'em up. I'm tired of States' Rights."
-Gen. George Thomas, Union Army of the Cumberland
Ryan Thunder wrote:Anything written by Margaret Atwood. Blech.
I'm not sure about "everything", but can I second Oryx and Crake on charges of moronic assertions, luddism, lack of understanding of human nature, and grotesquely blatant attempts to manipulate the reader?
Aha! Someone who agrees with me!
My 12th-grade English teacher tricked me into reading it. Bloody hell...
The reason they did it. They didn't do it out of spite of humanity or anything like that, they did it because that's how they work: they take whatever they have at hand, use it up and always move on.
Damaging our world was just a side effect of their appearance, and all they wanted to do was warn us, not harm us.
And doing so, doomed our planet. I recall more of the book, but not the part about they warning us of anything.
Credo!
Chat with me on Skype if you want to talk about writing, ideas or if you want a test-reader! PM for address.
It certainly has a creepy and disturbing society based on some men in power latching on to one fucked up part of the Bible but to me it falls apart when it tries to explain how this came to be. I also couldn't quite accept that enough of America would roll over for forcible change in government by a group who makes Pat Robertson seem tame.
I mean the Bible thumping Jesus freak President in Escape From L.A. was something I could buy. I just couldn't fully suspend my disbelief in The Handmaid's Tale. I still thought it was worth the read but not good enough to win all the awards it did. Wiki The Handmaid's Tale
It does make people think about some of the fucked up things that people cherry pick from the Bible so maybe that's why it gets so many complaints from parents and pupils.
By the pricking of my thumb,
Something wicked this way comes.
Open, locks,
Whoever knocks.
How can you have a thread about massively overrated sci-fi novels without mentioning Aldous Huxley's so-called "classic" work of speculative literature, Brave New World?
"It's not evil for God to do it. Or for someone to do it at God's command."- Jonathan Boyd on baby-killing
"you guys are fascinated with the use of those "rules of logic" to the extent that you don't really want to discussus anything."- GC
"I do not believe Russian Roulette is a stupid act" - Embracer of Darkness
"Viagra commercials appear to save lives" - tharkûn on US health care.
Tsyroc wrote:It certainly has a creepy and disturbing society based on some men in power latching on to one fucked up part of the Bible but to me it falls apart when it tries to explain how this came to be. I also couldn't quite accept that enough of America would roll over for forcible change in government by a group who makes Pat Robertson seem tame.
Personally after reading the Wikipedia page on it my thought was that it sounded more like somebody's messed up paranoid psychosexual fantasy than an exploration of what a Christian theocracy would actually be like. Though I've never actually read the book, so it's possible that I'm wrong.
Junghalli wrote:Personally after reading the Wikipedia page on it my thought was that it sounded more like somebody's messed up paranoid psychosexual fantasy than an exploration of what a Christian theocracy would actually be like. Though I've never actually read the book, so it's possible that I'm wrong.
That's probably a good description of what's actually effective about the book. Certainly the main charcter's sexual life is fucked up almost completely under the control of others.
The book doesn't really focus on the government much other than to explain how things got the way they currently are in the book. I tend to think that if the author had just gone with "this is how it is" and not tried to explain it in as much detail the effective part of the book would have been just as effective and not been (IMO) undermined by implausibility.
By the pricking of my thumb,
Something wicked this way comes.
Open, locks,
Whoever knocks.
I don't know about that, it seems to me less a messed up sexual fantasy than just somewhat poorly thought out. I could see it happening though, as there are societies today that are almost as fucked up.
I do see where you're coming from though. For my part, the later Dune books strike me that way to a limited extent, what with the axlotl tanks. I never got more than a few chapters into one of them though, so that could be a bogus impression.
Darth Wong wrote:How can you have a thread about massively overrated sci-fi novels without mentioning Aldous Huxley's so-called "classic" work of speculative literature, Brave New World?
Darth Wong wrote:How can you have a thread about massively overrated sci-fi novels without mentioning Aldous Huxley's so-called "classic" work of speculative literature, Brave New World?
Because I was trying to forget I ever read it.
There is a good reason why the guy hangs himself.
And Tyrsoc? Your Wiki link's screwed up.
Nitram, slightly high on cough syrup: Do you know you're beautiful?
Me: Nope, that's why I have you around to tell me.
Nitram: You -are- beautiful. Anyone tries to tell you otherwise kill them.
"A life is like a garden. Perfect moments can be had, but not preserved, except in memory. LLAP" -- Leonard Nimoy, last Tweet
Darth Wong wrote:How can you have a thread about massively overrated sci-fi novels without mentioning Aldous Huxley's so-called "classic" work of speculative literature, Brave New World?