Hard SF discussion
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Books recommended for hard SF readers:
http://www.hardsf.org/HSFSBkLt.htm
The Yahoo Hard SF group's books of the month:
http://www.hardsf.org/HSFSBotm.htm
Links for hard SF suggestions:
http://www.hardsf.org/HSFSLink.htm
Suggestions from hard SF readers:
http://www.hardsf.org/HSFSRead.htm

http://www.goodreads.com/list/show/48...

Ah, but that is *all* SF, not just Hard SF. So you're going to get some space operas, sf-fantasy, etc., mixed in there.


antares trilogy and gibraltar trilogy
very deep on subjects as velocity, acceleration, the math behind it, language barriers, first contact an everything aroud that, strategies for military, and so on....
former NASA aerospace engineer

http://www.amazon.com/Red-Queen-Subst...
"Red Queen is a story about the yearning for freedom and agency in a world dominated by bureaucrats and propagandists, and it would not have been published by a major house. The world of Red Queen is just a decade or two away, and looks very much like the world we live in, just a few steps worse. In the tradition of Heinlein's If This Goes On--, I have extrapolated from current trends and imagined the politics that result. The authoritarian tendencies we see in modern western states will probably be reversed at some point--but what if they just keep getting worse? This is especially true of the US, with its 9/11-justified surveillance and interception of every citizen's email and message metadata, and a penal-industrial complex that imprisons about one in three black men at some point in their lives, often for victimless crimes like drug possession. A more serious terrorist incident might lead to even more restrictions on freedom and privacy. And that's where Red Queen begins."

Asimov's Caves of Steel and The Naked Sun--the first SF mysteries?
Heinlein's The Moon is a Harsh Mistress--the precursor to HAL?
Dick's Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep?--the basis for Blade Runner, the best SF movie
Bradbury's Fahrenheit 451--the librarian's Orwell?
Benford's Galaxy Center novels--Skynet w/o Schwarzenegger?
Pohl's Heechee trilogy--has Hawking read these books?
Hoyle's The Black Cloud--Spielberg couldn't make this ET lovable
Hogan's Giants trilogy--the great circle of life?
Hogan's The Proteus Operation--time travel done right, not like in The Time Traveler's Wife
Clarke's Rendezvous with Rama--forget the sequels and savor the first book
The science and technology in these books varies in quality, but they probably should be read by anyone aspiring to write hard sci-fi, where the science and technology just makes great stories even better.
r/Steve
I'm not an expert on this topic and that's why I wanted the recommendations. Can someone make one please?