hamarplazt
100% No Soul Guaranteed
Argh, I didn't know this. My favorite author dies, and I only hear about it a week later.polystyle desu said:The Lems' men has passed away ...
Stanislaw Lem RIP last week , i believe .
Argh, I didn't know this. My favorite author dies, and I only hear about it a week later.polystyle desu said:The Lems' men has passed away ...
Stanislaw Lem RIP last week , i believe .
hamarplazt said:Argh, I didn't know this. My favorite author dies, and I only hear about it a week later.
spackb0y said:What else of Lem's is good? I've only read Solaris and another one which escapes me... something about a man alone on spaceship (was a long time ago!).[/QUOTE
I thought The Invincible and Futurological Congress were both really great. I liked Fiasco quite a bit as well. Not read Cyberiad yet but a friend that really likes hiim recommends it highly.
Yeah, Lem is never really bad, but sometimes he's not all that good either. I'm not much for the Pirx books, a bit too ordinary hard sf for my taste. Fiasco and His Masters Voice are much better in that they seem like hard sf, but actually have a lot of the same mindtwisting content as Solaris.Eric said:I don't think Lem really has any *bad* work. Probably my favorites though are Fiasco, the Pirx books (beautifully lotek), Cyberiad, and Memoirs of a Space Traveller (though you have to be up for silliness for those last two).
Women quite shockingly under-represented here (Le Guin the only woman mentioned thus far I think). About time that Octavia Butler got a mention: her Xenogenesis trilogy is rightly celebreated but my favourite is the lesser known Clay's Ark (I don't think there's a better book for viscerally rendering becoming-alien).
Pat Cadigan is also very under-rated.... Again I wouldn't go for the best known of her works (Synners) but for the techopsychosis of Fools (imagine Bowie/ Foxx identity-memory swapping/ Warholian theatre as an SF novel) and the delicately diagrammed implex of Tea from an Empty Cup (cyberspace whodunnit)...
haven't read her but isn't there a female sf writer whose quite avant and highly regarded who wrote under the name James Tiptree
and marge (?) pierce (?), the woman on the edge of time (or something)
One female SF writer that I've been interested in checking out since reading a short bio of her in a magazine is Carol Emshwiller.
I found her own version here: http://www.sfwa.org/members/emshwiller/
She sounds like a legend.
Anyone read her stuff? Any good places to start? Or should I just grab the first work that I find (as usual : )
but I finished Use of Weapons today and I've got to admit I wasn't as impressed: he writes beautifully but I just felt that the plot/story was a bit too convoluted and tricksy. The ending was somewhat grotesque and confusing too.
Any of you read it and have an opinion? Have I missed something?
Ripley, I've read "Perdido Street Station": it has some really nice moments but it could have done with some more revision and editing: it felt a bit like a gothic potboiler. I might check out "The Scar" someday...
Perdido Street Station I thought was wonderful - but, as you say, it's not really science fiction; it's more of a gothic fantasy in the same sort of area as Lanark or Gormenghast
another English sci-fi author I've been enjoying is Tricia Sullivan. I think I posted about her in another thread. really weird, aggressive, wigged-out stuff.
and I mentioned her in my first post above![]()
she doesn't have distribution in the US, i think, all her paperbacks are super expensive, more's the pity.
ok where is that new Iranian sci-fi/horror novel post? which thread was it in? can't find it for some god damned reason... thanks
'Cyclonopedia' - it's now in three threads: one in Thought and one in this forum, both dedicated to the book, and it's been mention in the 'Dissensus book club' thread, where it was unanimously decided that it would be the next book to be read.
Cool, I just realised 'unanimously' must mean 'as one soul'. Far out, maaaan...![]()