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We love books. Tell us about your favourite books and authors, and why they are so good. And while you're at it - having dined out for years on the time I threw Dan Brown out of a train window - tell us who to avoid.
( , Thu 5 Jan 2012, 13:40)
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Diaspora is Greg Egan's best work. Proper hard SF. Not hard as in "it's got spaceships in it" but hard as in "your brains will leak out of your ears trying to comprehend the scale" hard.
Permutation City is another one by Egan with a similar kind of vertiginous feel to it.
The Diamond Age, by Neal Stephenson, has the ring of plausibility to it - not a dystopia, not a utopia, and vastly more grown-up than its better-known little brother, Snow Crash.
The Laundry novels (The Atrocity
To avoid: The Lord of the Rings. Because it's turgid, slow, dull, slow, boring, soporific and above all slow. And inexplicably overrated.
All IMHO, of course.
[Edit: Thanks to Pig Bodine for making me notice that I'd got the name of one of my fave books wrong. D'oh.]
( , Thu 5 Jan 2012, 14:37, 5 replies)
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I loved Diaspora and Permutation City...not read Diamond Age but have read other Stephenson stuff, and will endeavour to seek out the Laundry books on your recommendation :)
( , Thu 5 Jan 2012, 14:42, closed)
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I wanted to slate it but was cowardly of the inevitable moaning war that would kick off.
good for you.
( , Thu 5 Jan 2012, 14:58, closed)
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Halting State is another excellent one, now with a sequel called Rule 34. Another Lanudry short story that's easily overlooked is the one that hasn't appeared in one of his books:
www.tor.com/stories/2009/12/overtime
Well worth a read for any not familar with the series who's interested in having a look.
( , Thu 5 Jan 2012, 15:32, closed)
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but the Laundry novels just have precisely the right mix of humour, action, and weirdness to keep me amused from now until CASE NIGHTMARE GREEN.
( , Fri 6 Jan 2012, 0:13, closed)
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but by JG Ballard (and a damn fine read which I recommend to all). Google tells me, as I'm as yet unfamiliar with Charlie Stross, you mean The Atrocity Archives. Thanks for the tips and have wanted to read something by Stephenson after Snow Crash for a while now.
( , Fri 6 Jan 2012, 1:27, closed)
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