• Aido@lemmy.world
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    3 days ago

    I’ve read Terry Pratchett’s Night Watch three times, currently reading The Color of Magic for the first time and then I’m going to re-read Mort

    I’ve read Ellen Raskin’s The Westing Game three times, but that was for school. Pretty good children’s mystery book, though

  • SanguinePar@lemmy.world
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    A few I’ve read at least twice and will definitely read again at some point:

    • Catch 22
    • Infinite Jest
    • The Windup Bird Chronicle
    • The Handmaid’s Tale
    • Full 5 part Hitchhiker’s Guide trilogy
    • His Dark Materials Trilogy (plus the Book of Dust series, if we ever get that last one!!)
    • Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas
    • Brave New World
    • Slaughterhouse Five
      • SanguinePar@lemmy.world
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        Yeah, I think so, but I think it was also slated for 2024, and possibly even 2023! It’ll come, and I’d rather he takes his time to get it right, but still, very impatient! 😁

        • Ioughttamow@fedia.io
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          Yeah, it was at least slated for 2024 at some point. I finished the second one early last year, and as December rolled closer I realized that wasn’t going to happen. Same thing happened to a few others I’m waiting for I believe. Alecto and white wing, dark star. I think Alecto is tentative for this year but I have no idea on white wing, dark star

          • SanguinePar@lemmy.world
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            Just looked it up and someone on Reddit six days ago said BoD3 is finished and will hopefully be out this year! Woop!!

            I’ve not heard of those others, will need to check them out 👍

            • Ioughttamow@fedia.io
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              I love the locked tomb books (Gideon, harrow, Nona the ninth, with Alecto the upcoming one). A cheeky description would be lesbian necromancers in spaaaace. I really really like the dark star trilogy as well, but that is harder for me to throw out recommendations for, it can be brutal. A lot of gory violence, and a fair share of sexual violence as well. Black leopard, red wolf and moon witch, spider king each have separate narrators with their own distinct histories, but then their stories intertwine around the same mission and its consequences, and their tales are relayed to an inquisitor who is interrogating them. They are both unreliable narrators and they HATE each other, but there may be more to it. White wing, dark star will be the last one, with a third narrator, and will be more horror focused I believe

  • Lorindól@sopuli.xyz
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    There are so many, but here are a few from the top of my head:

    The Silmarillion, J.R.R. Tolkien.

    The Lord of the Rings, J.R.R. Tolkien.

    Time Enough For Love, Robert A. Heinlein.

    Starship Troopers, Robert A. Heinlein.

    Don Quijote, Miguel de Cervantes.

    Divine Comedy, Dante Alighieri.

    Dune, Frank Herbert.

    Paradise Lost, John Milton.

    Childhood’s End, Arthur C. Clarke.

    The Riftwar Saga, Raymond E. Feist.

      • Lorindól@sopuli.xyz
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        Yeah, “Time Enough For Love” ended up on that list mostly because it’s so different. That made an impression on me when I read it in high school, in the way of “Huh, I guess it’s actually possible to write a book like this”. It had a lot of interesting ideas but the narrative sprawls around pretty wildly.

        Riftwar Saga basically takes Tolkien’s Middle-earth setting and mixes it with our own world’s Middle age cultures, plus magical stargates and an invasion from an another world. It’s not a ripoff in any way, it carries it own story proudly but the similarities with names from Tolkien’s works was a bit distracting at first. These were the first books I was able to read entirely in original English in my early teens.

        • InverseParallax@lemmy.world
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          Will have to give it a shot.

          Redoing storm light now, didn’t love it the first time, but it was OK and I forgot most of the details when the 4th book dropped. It’s not bad but I don’t get why others are so crazy about it.

  • gjoel@programming.dev
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    4 days ago

    I have all discworld books, I would definitely reread most of them. I just reread The Hail Mary Project.

    • showmeyourkizinti@startrek.website
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      I’m going through the Discworld series for the first time right now. I’m going in chronological order but when I finish I’ll probably go through them again eventually but I think I’ll do series instead in bunches. I’m already looking forward to rereading the Watch series back to back.

        • showmeyourkizinti@startrek.website
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          Yeah there are like 40 of them but you can split them up in to series. If you liked The Truth you’ll probably like the Watch series starting with Guards! Guards! and following Sam Vines and the other Watchmen.

      • shalafi@lemmy.world
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        On my third pass right now. Skipped a couple of the first novels, but I love the original order. Got feels for all the series, but I like the perfect way he kept them mixed up.

        “Oh shit! Another witches book!”

        “Back to the Watch! NICE!”

        “Rincewind? Hell with it, those are all funny as hell.”

    • shalafi@lemmy.world
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      4 days ago

      Third run through Discworld in the past 2 years. My god, been trying to think how to explain to my best friend. I lack the words.

  • wabafee@lemmy.world
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    Lockstep by Karl Schroeder Hard sci-fi about how a intergalactic empire being run without developing any faster than light technology.

  • shalafi@lemmy.world
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    I’m on my 13th or so read of Blindsight. Think I’ve unpacked it all, finally. I feel like a fruitcake having read it and *Echopraxia" so many times, but damn they’re deep.

    Not a fan of all of Watt’s novels, but those two feel like he packed something to think about into nearly every single sentence. Easy read if you want to go fast, or, take your time and dig in. Never read a novel(s) that could go both ways.

    Fuck me. Just talking about it is getting me hype for another run.

    Blindsight:

    "I brought her flowers one dusky Tuesday evening when the light was perfect. I pointed out the irony of that romantic old tradition— the severed genitalia of another species, offered as a precopulatory bribe—and then I recited my story just as we were about to fuck.

    To this day, I still don’t know what went wrong.”

    Echopraxia:

    “Fifty thousand years ago there were these three guys spread out across the plain and they each heard something rustling in the grass. The first one thought it was a tiger, and he ran like hell, and it was a tiger but the guy got away. The second one thought the rustling was a tiger and he ran like hell, but it was only the wind and his friends all laughed at him for being such a chickenshit. But the third guy thought it was only the wind, so he shrugged it off and the tiger had him for dinner. And the same thing happened a million times across ten thousand generations - and after a while everyone was seeing tigers in the grass even when there were`t any tigers, because even chickenshits have more kids than corpses do. And from those humble beginnings we learn to see faces in the clouds and portents in the stars, to see agency in randomness, because natural selection favours the paranoid. Even here in the 21st century we can make people more honest just by scribbling a pair of eyes on the wall with a Sharpie. Even now we are wired to believe that unseen things are watching us.”

    • abbadon420@lemm.ee
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      Don’t ask me silly questions, I won’t play silly games I’m just a simple choo-choo train, and I’ll always be the same I only want to race along, beneath the bright blue sky And be a happy choo-choo train, until the day I die

    • Yes. Another good series; some better than others - I personally liked the first the most - but I think they’re all important pieces of the story.

      Definitely on my “read again” list, although I only discovered and read them all a couple of years ago; maybe next year.

  • Several that others have already mentioned, and:

    • The Golden Age Oecumene, by John C Wright
    • The Chronicles of Master Li and Number Ten Ox, by Barry Hughart
    • Any and all of The Culture novels
    • The Hobbit, and TLotR trilogy. Used to read them every summer, for about twenty years.
    • Armor, by John Steakley. Sadly, the only sci-fi novel he ever wrote, and one of only two books he ever authored, IIRC.
    • The Jean le Flambeur trilogy by Hannu Rajaniemi, which is on my list to read again this year.
    • A Wizard of Earthsea trilogy, which I’m about to read again as soon as my wife finished them.
    • The Chronicles of Narnia, which I used to read frequently when younger. I’m almost afraid to pick them up again now, for fear that they won’t be as good (for an adult) as I remember.
    • Hugin@lemmy.world
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      John Steakley was a full time ghost writer so he wrote a lot of other books but not under his name.

      He was working on a draft of Armor 2 when he died. I think I still have a copy of his first draft of chapter 1 somewhere. It’s to bad it will probably never be finished or published.

    • MintyFresh@lemmy.world
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      Love the culture series! Communism… In space!!! Though I’d say to anyone who hasn’t read them yet to skip the first and come back to it. It’s a great novel, but it smells like the 80’s. Was my first read in the series and it turned me off to the rest of them until years later when I have the series another chance

      • IMHO, post-scarcity is really the only way communism works. And it’s not true communism in the Culture; people still own things - artifacts, art, themselves. And it’s also not communism in the Marxist sense, where the workers own the means of production, because there isn’t a working class and production is largely automated. It’s some sort of post-Communism thing we don’t have a name for. Or, maybe we do, and I just don’t know it?

        • Wugmeister@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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          I think your issue is that the Culture’s economy is so often depicted from the perspective of humans. I have two guinea pigs, and from their perspective they are living in a post-scarcity world. Same for the humans of the culture. Their economy isnt really visible from a human scale.

          Either way, Ian M Banks isn’t really interested in the economics of his setting and spends much more effort detailing the politics of how such a setting works socially, which i should point out doesn’t need a post-scarcity economy to create. I’m not sure if you noticed this, but the culture punishes criminals primarily through shunning. (Sure, there’s also the slap drones, but I’m fairly certain that slap drones are a humane alternative to shunning.) The theory is that their laws are lax enough that the only real crimes left require actual malice to commit, and shunning serves two purposes:

          1. Social isolation is the most painful punishment for nearly all humans, which makes it a strong deterrent.
          2. You cant commit violence or theft if you aren’t allowed near others, so those who don’t care about having friends or family also get prevented from committing more crimes.
          3. It looks completely bloodless, since the subject doesn’t physically suffer, and if it turns out they didn’t do it you can just stop shunning them.
          • so often depicted from the perspective of humans.

            You’re right; AFAICR, the economy is only ever depicted from a human perspective. Either in contrast to external cultures, or just describing daily life. Your Guinea Pig example is quite apt: humans in The Culture really are just pampered pets; or, maybe more like working dogs, although ship remotes could probably do all the stuff Contact agents do.

            Have you ever read The Golden Oecumene trilogy, by Wright? The last chapter, in particular, is what I’m thinking of.

        • sem@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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          I’ve only read one post-scarcity novel and that’s Down And Out in the Magic Kingdom by Cory Doctorow. I think it’s his first novel.

  • BeMoreCareful@lemmy.world
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    4 days ago

    The Murderbot diaries.

    This is also an awesome thread. I see a lot of books I love and a lot that I’m interested in.

    • reddig33@lemmy.world
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      Murderbot series is a mixed bag. Some of the books are great fun. Others read like filler to me. Wondering what you think about casting of Alexander Skarsgård in the upcoming tv series? Personally I think he’s way too old for the part.

    • shalafi@lemmy.world
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      The Bobiverse recommendations seem to go hand in hand with Murderbot. Read both series back to back, didn’t know what I was missing.

      • BeMoreCareful@lemmy.world
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        I hadn’t heard of the bobiverse before. I look forward to checking those out. It sounds like a neat premise.

    • zonnewin@feddit.nl
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      While I enjoyed the first book, and might pick up the others, I wasn’t as impressed, and wouldn’t put it on any reread shortlist. What did I miss?

  • sem@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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    Synchronicity because I just put a book on hold at the library that I’m going to read again. It is called “Galileo’s Dream” by Kim Stanley Robinson, and it’s half historical fiction, half science fiction about: “what if future humans living on the Galilean moons of Jupiter discovered time travel and needed Galileo’s help?”

  • confuser@lemmy.zip
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    The bone comic book omnibus from Jeff smith Bone omnibus amazon link

    The book is basically Tolkien+Disney, it is aimed at a kid audience but it tackles some heavy topics that adults will enjoy, its great because it tackles metaphysics a lot in ways that are interesting for all ages.