Big Weird Science Fiction / Fantasy

Slothrop

Tight but Polite
Greetings, Earth-Nerds!

I'm after recommendations for interesting science fiction or fantasy books for some escapist fun. Mystery, suspense, plots within plots, unspeakable secrets lurking in decaying space stations, dark rituals in underground temples, planet-sized alien intelligences orbiting neutron stars. The weirder the better, preferably not a total misery-fest, decent writing and non-awful politics would be nice.

Any suggestions? Thanks!
 

Slothrop

Tight but Polite
Good starts that I've already read:
Iain M Banks' Culture novels
various Warren Ellis comics
some of China Mieville's stuff
 

droid

Well-known member
Have you read Peter Watts? Blindsight and the sequel are great.

Empire games & the sequel by Stross are decent escapist multiverse tomes.

'Years of rice and salt' is my go to alternate history book, exceptional writing. Also recommend Aurora, beautiful AI/Colony ship tale, anything by Kim Robinson is worthy.

The Joe Abercrombie first law trilogy is decent hard nosed fantasy, the spin off books are good too.

Highly recommend Claire North. The first 15 lives of Harry August, touch, 84k, Gameshouse trilogy, all excellent.

Standout books from this year are Smythe's 'I Still dream' and Harkaway's 'Gnomon'.

Adam Roberts is a perennial favourite. You'd love 'the thing itself', bizarre high concept Kantian sci fi with a touch of urban realism, 'New model army' and 'Jack Glass' are also great.

The Europe series by Dave Hutchinson, just finished this year, really excellent.

Ive been reading a fair bit of Alice Sheldon/James Tiptree Jr. One of the finest short story writers in sci fi, any collection will do.

Enough for now?
 

Slothrop

Tight but Polite
Thanks, yeah - lots to be getting on with there!

Although as it goes I got M John Harrison's collected Viriconium stories for Christmas, which also seems fairly well on-target so far.
 

IdleRich

IdleRich
Thanks, yeah - lots to be getting on with there!
Although as it goes I got M John Harrison's collected Viriconium stories for Christmas, which also seems fairly well on-target so far.
I read those a few years ago. Some kind of weird sideways look at fantasy going on there, I dunno if that cleverness makes it better or simply unsatisfactory. I read his real-world books too - great writing but... I dunno.
 

Slothrop

Tight but Polite
I'm enjoying it so far - it seems to fit into the Dunsanian conception of fantasy as a series of arresting vignettes, possibly threaded together into a fairly loose narrative, rather than the post-Tolkein approach of an painstakingly constructed world where a tightly worked-out but fundamentally fairly mechanical plot takes place. I know he's written in the past about his hostility to "worldbuilding" as a practice. It reminds me a bit of Gene Wolf's New Sun stories in that respect, too.

But I'm only just starting the second novel, which I gather is where it really takes a swerve into the left-field. So we'll see.
 

IdleRich

IdleRich
I'm enjoying it so far - it seems to fit into the Dunsanian conception of fantasy as a series of arresting vignettes, possibly threaded together into a fairly loose narrative, rather than the post-Tolkein approach of an painstakingly constructed world where a tightly worked-out but fundamentally fairly mechanical plot takes place. I know he's written in the past about his hostility to "worldbuilding" as a practice. It reminds me a bit of Gene Wolf's New Sun stories in that respect, too.
But I'm only just starting the second novel, which I gather is where it really takes a swerve into the left-field. So we'll see.
Yeah I've read that about his hostility to worldbuilding, I'm not totally sure what that means in that he obviously has built a world. Maybe he is referring to how he (VERY MILD SPOILERS) undercuts and undermines this by introducing contradictions in each book. The world is seemingly the same place but it differs in particulars and sometimes not just in particulars but to a much greater degree. Also characters recur (or maybe just characters with the same names) but seem to be different.
A further thing I should add which made the books harder to read for me (as a generally quite cheerful person) is the air of melancholy and sort of tired sadness which hangs over the whole thing. I think this may become more apparent later on - certainly there is one book in which someone offers someone a very poor meal and I found it very affecting and depressing in the way it was done. This kind of acceptance of nothing being good any more. His real world books are mired in sadness too I think. There is always a sense of good stuff all being in the past and that the rest of life will be about just making do until the inevitable ending. Now you might argue that this is a consequence of being in the "dying earth" sci fi subgenre but I don't think that necessarily follows. Recently I read the first couple of books in the Wheel of Time series which is also set in some kind of afterworld with an implication of previously existing technology and the like but - while being an absolutely shocking rip-off of Lord of the Rings - it does not feature the melancholy of MJH.
nb I'm not recommending WOT
 

IdleRich

IdleRich
Adam Roberts is a perennial favourite. You'd love 'the thing itself', bizarre high concept Kantian sci fi with a touch of urban realism
I've read that one. Pretty good considering it must have been inspired by him loving the joke created by combining "The Thing"
(as in a film about a shape-changing alien at the north pole) with the Kantian phrase. It reminded me of a weird book I picked up in a charity shop which combined philosophy and time travel using homeopathy (which, in the book, worked - in a sense at least) - does anyone know the thing I'm on about? It was surprisingly interesting for a random find.
 

DannyL

Wild Horses
Bruce Sterling's Schizmatrix is one of the best SF books I've ever read. It's set in our solar system and is all from the point of view of a single protagonist as we spread out and evolve new ways of living - the backdrop is an ongoing cultural war between "Mechs" and "Shapers" i.e tech/gear heads vs a psychedelia-inspired controlled mutation and bio-hacking. It's from very early on in his career and it's kinda like a first album - loads of fantastic ideas and flash, and no flab. He has a real futurist's concern with how technologies are applied so there's all this kinda strange detail, and he allows that to map out into sociological concerns as well, in a way that a lot of SF writers just can't do i.e. rather than just writing "Cops in Space", he's asking how might these new social formations actually function, once technology starts to reshape things and he has the imaginative ability to follow through. The ideas pop off every page. Highest recommendation.
 

DannyL

Wild Horses
Thanks, yeah - lots to be getting on with there!

Although as it goes I got M John Harrison's collected Viriconium stories for Christmas, which also seems fairly well on-target so far.

MJ Harrision's Light is firrrrryyyah btw. An amazing book. i've got my own reading of it which I won't share 'cos spoilers but it's got the lot - grotty occult serial killers, sentient space ships, an unfathomable graveyard of lost alien technologies.... and it's decidedly optimistic to boot. And he writes beautiful as well as I'm sure you know. Should really read him some more.
 
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IdleRich

IdleRich
MJ Harrision's Light is firrrrryyyah btw. An amazing book. i've got my own reading of it which I won't share 'cos spoilers but it's got the lot - grotty occult serial killers, sentient space ships, an unfathomable graveyard of lost alien technologies.... and it's decidedly optimistic to boot. And he writes beautiful as well as I'm sure you know. Should really read him some more.
Light is the one I haven't read - which is a bit annoying cos everyone says it's the best one.
 

woops

is not like other people
Light is great I agree, but the Sequel, Nova Swing, was nothing like. Apparently the third in the trilogy is a bit better and also apparently he was under contract for three books but only had ideas for one(?). In the last few days I've been digging into the interviews with Thomas Ligotti who was big around here some years ago, which are entertainingly anti-life, old goth, but the single short story of his I found online was, perhaps inevitably, disappointing.
 
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