Science Fiction Aficionados discussion
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Hidden Gems

Should toss out a Short Story folder, maybe?




here's some hidden gems:
Davy by edgar pangborn. i love this book, it is wonderful.
Rite of Passage by alexei panshin. classic.
The Gardens of Delight by ian watson. pretty bizarre.
The Sardonyx Net by elizabeth lynn. issues of slavery and gender roles explored.
The Humanoids: A Novel and The Humanoid Touch by jack williamson. classic golden age.
The World Below and The Amphibians - A Romance of 50,000 Years Hence by s fowler wright. strange golden age classic and its even stranger sequel.
The Void Captain's Tale by norman spinrad. new wave.
Rumors of Spring by richard grant. i really loved this one too, it's awesome. it is science fantasy i suppose.
Davy by edgar pangborn. i love this book, it is wonderful.
Rite of Passage by alexei panshin. classic.
The Gardens of Delight by ian watson. pretty bizarre.
The Sardonyx Net by elizabeth lynn. issues of slavery and gender roles explored.
The Humanoids: A Novel and The Humanoid Touch by jack williamson. classic golden age.
The World Below and The Amphibians - A Romance of 50,000 Years Hence by s fowler wright. strange golden age classic and its even stranger sequel.
The Void Captain's Tale by norman spinrad. new wave.
Rumors of Spring by richard grant. i really loved this one too, it's awesome. it is science fantasy i suppose.





The only ones 'round here pooping bricks outta their butts is my literary gremlins - writer's block/bricks, that is...* :(
*Too bad it couldn't be Legos, then I could actually BUILD this tale better.

If you don't mind a little humor in sci-fi books, or in any other genre for that matter, you will love Battlefield Earth! After I read it, I realized that there were 9 more books in the series. It was a shock to me!



Extermely humorous SF of two robots competing to create the greater invention. Eventually one robot (can't remember his name right now (something long with a K?)) invents a calculator the size of a three story building, which insists (no matter how many times the machine is reprogrammed) that two + two = seven!

I joke now but I had to count my phalanges to make sure I'd done my math right.
Michael wrote: "Has anyone mentioned The Cyberiad by Stanislaw Lem?
Extermely humorous SF of two robots competing to create the greater invention. Eventually one robot (can't remember his name rig..."
I have been wanting to read Cyberiad...glad you endorse it!
Extermely humorous SF of two robots competing to create the greater invention. Eventually one robot (can't remember his name rig..."
I have been wanting to read Cyberiad...glad you endorse it!

I did remember that one name started with 'K'! Not bad for having read 30 years ago...

Books mentioned in this topic
The Cyberiad (other topics)Friday (other topics)
Solaris (other topics)
Last and First Men (other topics)
Star Maker (other topics)
More...
Authors mentioned in this topic
Poul Anderson (other topics)Henry Kuttner (other topics)
Leigh Brackett (other topics)
Fritz Leiber (other topics)
The most recent one I've come upon is Russian sci-fi. Hard to Be a God