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by Richard Davies
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Neuromancer
by William Gibson (1984)
This was a virtually impossible task. Put together a list of 50 must-read science fiction books and dont make
anyone angry. Science fiction is the most discussed and argued over genre in literature but it actually goes way
beyond books and into film, TV, video games and even toys.
Here are the criteria I used. One book per author, so that was hard on the big three of science fiction Robert
Heinlein, Isaac Asimov and Arthur C Clarke, who each have multiple classic titles to their name. Attempt to show
as many sub-genres of science fiction and plot themes as possible. Include early stories that influenced the genre
as a whole and launched popular themes, even if those books appear a bit dated today.
I wanted to show the unbelievable breadth of this galactic-sized genre and, of course, I failed because this is just
the tip of the spaceberg there are probably 500 essential science fiction books, not 50.
The War of the Worlds is on the list, a famous example of invasion literature, but I could easily have used The
Time Machine. For Ray Bradbury, theres The Illustrated Man but I could have used Fahrenheit 451 or The Martian
Chronicles.
Many people include alternate reality novels as science fiction but I didnt feel comfortable having them on the list
as theres not much science in that sort of fiction.
The list includes hard and soft science fiction. Hard science fiction features great attention to detail in the
quantitative sciences, while soft riffs on the social sciences. Youll also find space opera with its heroes and
heroines on distant planets; cyberpunk, loved by nerds in goggles everywhere; time travel a simple concept
thats been around since Mark Twains day; military science fiction where soldiers drive the narrative; dystopian
fiction where society has usually gone awry; superhuman stories where humans develop new or greater skills (and
that usually means trouble) and the always cheery apocalyptic fiction sub-genre (where we could be battling to
avoid the end of Earth or struggling to survive after a catastrophe). There are many recurrent powerful themes
such as machine and human relationships, aliens and human relationships, biological and ecological matters, and
paranormal activities.
You are spoiled for choice this list includes novellas, short story collections, a graphic novel and books from
published 1864 to 2011.
For further reading recommendations, brush up on the Hugo and Nebula Awards - the winners and the shortlisted
titles - and also the books published by Tor (who really know this genre, and fantasy, inside out), as well
as Locus Magazine and the science fiction tags on LibraryThing.com.
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Odd John
by Olaf Stapledon (1935)
Earth Abides
by George R. Stewart (1949)
Written shortly after Hiroshima, this post-apocalyptic novel imagines the rebuilding process.
Foundation
by Isaac Asimov (1951)
The original novel in a pioneering series. An immense plot that I cannot sum up in a sentence.
Mission of Gravity
by Hal Clement (1954)
A world-building novel on a planet with variable surface gravity. Insect-like locals, human explorers.
The Chrysalids
by John Wyndham (1955)
Set way in the future in a fundamentalist society. Telepathy makes people different.
Starship Troopers
by Robert Heinlein (1959)
Fine example of military science fiction from the late 1950s. A war against bugs.
Alas, Babylon
by Pat Frank (1959)
Frank imagines the effects of nuclear war on a small town in Florida.
Venus Plus X
by Theodore Sturgeon (1960)
20th century Charlie Johns wakes in a future filled with overpopulation, bigotry, and no gender.
Solaris
by Stanislaw Lem (1961)
Humans study a planet while the planet studies them. A novel about miscommunication.
Hothouse
by Brian Aldiss (1962)
An ecological-themed novel set in the far future with fantasy elements.
A Wrinkle in Time
by Madeleine LEngle (1962)
Childrens fiction, with fantasy elements, where a government scientist goes missing.
Dune
by Frank Herbert (1965)
This novel has sold 12 million copies so cant be bad. Spice before the Spice Girls.
Logans Run
by William F. Nolan & George Clayton Johnson (1967)
Age-themed science fiction. Everyone is killed off at 21 but there are runners.
Ringworld
by Larry Niven (1970)
From the golden era of the early 1970s. Set in 2850 in a radically different universe.
Man Plus
by Frederik Pohl (1976)
Cyborg (where man & machine combine) science fiction as humans attempt to colonize Mars.
The Stand
by Stephen King (1978)
Apocalyptic novel where a virus kills off most people and it is nightmarish for survivors.
Ender's Game
by Orson Scott Card (1985)
Violent futuristic sci-fi where the Earth is threatened by an ant-like species.
Consider Phlebas
by Iain M. Banks (1987)
Pure space opera. First in the Culture series, this novel features a sprawling space war between species.
Falling Free
by Lois McMaster Bujold (1988)
Quaddies are genetically modified humans used as slaves. They become obsolete and face a grim end.
Hyperion
by Dan Simmons (1989)
A complicated story-within-a-story novel with humanity spread across the galaxy.
Red Mars
by Kim Stanley Robinson (1993)
First in a readable trilogy imagining the colonization of Mars.
Ribofunk
by Paul Di Filippo (1996)
Biopunk short story collection a spin-off from cyberpunk featuring biotechnology.
Cryptonomicon
by Neal Stephenson (1999)
Historical science fiction adored by Geeks for its technology themes.
Uglies
by Scott Westerfeld (2005)
A novel based on cosmetic surgery for teenagers. Modern science fiction on a modern issue.
Little Brother
by Cory Doctorow (2007)
Modern cyberpunk in post-9/11 era. Teenage hackers battle Homeland Security over civil rights.
Embassytown
Let the indignant outcry of our fellow nerds commence - what did we miss?