- Joined
- Jan 29, 2022
I read Ringworld recently and it was pretty cool.
The Vampire Hunter D series is also pretty good sci-fi/horror.
The Vampire Hunter D series is also pretty good sci-fi/horror.
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Have you guys heard of jack l chalker all this guys books are basically sissyifaction fantasies
Which books of his have this? I liked some partially fantastic book of his I read in translation, and he was in my to-read.Not all of them, sometimes there's just weird uncomfortable stuff going on with centaurs without the sissyification.
Sissyifaction stuff? My memory for this stuff is bad, but the first Well of Souls book has it. I wouldn't be surprised if it was even worse in other places, but I stopped reading Chalker after that. Also has weird centaur stuff. I'm not sure if Chalker ever included it, but did you know that in old fantasy and the early D&D games centaurs had average-at-best intelligence and lots of them were retarded by human standards? Before, I tried to read the first Changewinds book but there was some weird proto-trans/lesbian stuff going on and I quit once the centaurs showed up, so I don't know how weird the series got.Which books of his have this? I liked some partially fantastic book of his I read in translation, and he was in my to-read.
The only book I saw with legit grossly weird centaurs was https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Titan_(Varley_novel)weird centaur stuff
Plot involved? Yeah, but if you ignore implications and maybe skip a scene or two you might be fine.The only book I saw with legit grossly weird centaurs was https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Titan_(Varley_novel)
and I am able to read Clive Barker with just skipping the bullshit, so is it, like, plot-involved?
I've found Asimov to be someone I can enjoy and appreciate, but I can't read more an 50-100 pages of his stuff back to back.Asimov was a strange writer, his End of Eternity is my favourite sci-fi novel, some of his early short stories are really good too. But I strongly dislike I, Robot.
Ellison is almost always a pleasure to read.
A lot of science fiction assumes that AI would first have a childlike naivety of the world. Realistically an AI would be either a human upload or trained on the internet.I just can't read about robots' psyche being more pure than people.
I should finish reading Accelerando, which is a stitch-up (fix-up?) novel, where it's basically a bunch of short stories that are more strongly connected than a short story collection. (I haven't read any other Stross.)A lot of science fiction assumes that AI would first have a childlike naivety of the world. Realistically an AI would be either a human upload or trained on the internet.
Charles Stross wrote Saturn's Children, where androids were made by killing babies and scanning their brains (only needed one baby brain per line though), after which various forms of physical and sexual abuse were used to condition the android to obey humans. The protagonist, a sex bot rendered obsolete by the extinction of humans, was pretty cynical.
Anyway I do respect Asimov actually, he was an interesting person, but the way his books ranged from Nightfall to I, robot makes it difficult for me to appreciate everything written by him.
Oh yeah his books are very, very good reads and he does excellent world building, but I always feel depressed at the end.Read Excession-one of the Culture books.
I was...confused to put it mildly. The plot jumps from like 12 POVs and the Mind dialogues were hard to follow. Basically some advanced artifact from another universe shows up, there are some intrigues, and the human(oid) cast are a bunch of short sighted divas being used by the Minds who are playing their own games, while running up against some hostile alien species that also wants the artifact.
Reading a little-apparently...it was meant to be this way? That is, Banks is trying to portray what hyper advanced godlike AIs are motivated to do, and thus the more human characters are basically irrelevant-not even pawns, really, just little pet projects for the minds' amusement.
I'm almost to the end of the series, and I've held off on finishing The Hydrogen Sonata because I don't want to confront the impossibility of further volumes.Oh yeah his books are very, very good reads and he does excellent world building, but I always feel depressed at the end.
The Player Of Games it turns out the human had been manipulated into the position that dictated the fate of an entire species
In Hydrogen Sonata people are trying to kill someone who has a lead on a major secret that impacts an entire species that is in the process of dying/moving to another plane of existence
Surface Detail has virtual heavens at war with virtual hells, and follows a woman who was trapped in hell and made into a symbol of hope in order to increase despair in hell.
Look To Windward has an assassin kill an AI and disrupt it's world, only for it to be revealed that the AI knew it was going to happen and had made arrangements.