Trainee neophyte
Established Member
AES":28eyxep4 said:Thanks for that "T n". Hadn't heard of him. Will look out for him. If you want "towering imagination" then if you haven't already, can I suggest Isaac Asimov, especially the Foundation "Trilogy" , which, with input from others, finished up at about 7 loosely connected volumes if I remember rightly.
Then of course there's Arthur C. Clarke, Robert A. Heinlein, & John Wyndham to name just 3 others in that genre; plus (IMO, "popular classics") such a R.E. Delderfield, especially "To Serve Them All Our Days", + other titles too;
and, and, and ..........
That would have been my standard reading list in my callow youth. Gene Wolf, Robert Silverberg, Larry Niven (I'm a huge Known Space fan - Protectors and Grogs and Kzin and Pierson's Puppeteers etc)...the list goes on and on. Unfortunately someone invented cyberpunk, and it all got edgy and grim and depressing. I like huge, monumental spacecraft and mad science and ludicrous scale - Space Opera, but it was ignored for years. There still aren't many new authors doing a good job of it, except Banks, who died of cancer recently, which was rather thoughtless of him. Terry Pratchet died, too, which is less than helpful. Charles Stross and Peter F Hamilton are two modern writers in the same vein, but not a patch on Iain M Banks, but then nobody else is.
Edit: here's a list to work your way through: some of it may be awful, but quite a lot of it is outstanding: https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of ... pera_media There's not much in there I haven't read, so I will now be hunting down the few that have fallen through the cracks.