Seriously- how can a thread like that go five months without an update? Is this simple indifference, as I hope, or have we in fact ceased to read? I can think of no good explanation- by which I mean, really, that there isn't an explanation that doesn't make us sound stupid, indifferent or actually illiterate, or like a community that has ceased to be so and is retreating into it's own little interest groups. Sometimes necromancy may not be the worst of evils...
Oh yes, books and stuff. Mostly ebooks, in fact- storage space reasons.
Ignoring the potboilers and mil-SF that aren't worthy of mention, Alistair Young's Vignettes of the Star Empire is interesting, because it is fragments from a heading for very advanced civilisation in the early- transhuman stages, in its' growth period; there is a Banksian vibe to it, which seems entirely deliberate. My guess is that Young felt that the years this side of Utopia, while humans still mattered, would be more interesting and that if he wanted to read about them, he might as well write about them- and had considerable fun doing so.
Timothy J Gawne's four book series starting with the Chronicles of Old Guy was fun although maybe a bit less SDN- like; thoroughly recommended for all Bolo fans, it is basically a Generation-Y, network- centric and net-savvy update of the concept.
For fans of the original, I have to bring up one of the biggest gaps in Keith Laumer's writing; If you look at the Retief stories, they are darkly witty, cynical diplomatic black-comedy that assume that everyone who isn't one of the suckers is one of the shysters, very disrespectful of rank, authority and bureaucracy- and he seldom if ever let those sensibilities loose on the Bolo universe. He compartmentalised his writing a bit too well.
Gawne doesn't make the same decision, and yay for it. He opens in outright dystopia, in fact, (chronologically if not in book order), takes a few stabs at sacred cows in passing. Speaking of which, this bit might stick in the throat of the collective, he is obviously a Christian- the sympathetic handling of the cybertank that believes itself to be Jesus Christ proves that. On the other hand the third in the series, chronologically a prequel, is entitled Neoliberal Economists Must Die! so you can take that either way.
There's another odd one; see if you can guess who perpetrated this- fifties SF before we realised how hostile the rest of the solar system was- before the end.
Robert Heinlein, Double Star. Someone else who did a rather better job than is generally realised of compartmentalising his writing, and letting his characters say what was appropriate for them to say rather than the editorial opinions he put into their mouths.The real meaning of what happened today is not that of an honour to one man. This-' I gestured with the Martian wand- 'is proof that two great races can reach out across the gap of strangeness with understanding. Our own race is spreading out to the stars. We shall find- we are finding- that we are vastly outnumbered. If we are to succeed in our expansion to the stars, we must deal honestly, humbly, with open hearts. I have heard it said that our Martian neighbours would overrun Earth if given the chance. This is nonsense; Earth is not suited to Martians. Let us protect our own- but let us not be seduced by fear and hatred into foolish acts. The stars will never be won by little minds; we must be as big as space itself.'
Oh, and an odd one, just for comparison purposes- George Biddlecombe's The Art of Rigging- 1890's publication, and an object lesson in how complicated even the primitive can be, and how little you really know when all you know is the history of something. Very useful for historical fiction writing, but I was flipping through it with a head in the stars, imagining the 2890's The Art of Magnetic Containment.
Blee.