Stuff I recently read:
Dancing With Eternity - So, for those of you interested in the vidya, the author, John Patrick Lowrie was the voice of the sniper in TF2. This leads to some hilarious reviews on Amazon.
Anyway, gimmick reviews aside, this is actually a really good sci-fi story. It's the mid-3rd millennium, and humanity has essentially done away with death by combinations of different technologies. Mo, the main character, is stranded on a backwater planet for tax evasion, but he gets an opportunity to get back into space by signing along with a very dangerous mission - so dangerous that it's actually possible to die. It's about 500 pages detailing a trip across the galaxy, looking at the ways humanity has changed as the result of immortality and the ways it's stayed the same.
Dancing With Eternity is a little uneven, since there are parts where Lowrie avoids infodumping at the expense of really slowing down the pace of the novel, but overall it's really good. Would definitely recommend it to anyone interested in sci-fi. Would probably be a great Christmas present for anyone over 16.
The Forever War - Joe Haldeman's sci-fi reimagining of the Vietnam War. After humanity discovers a race of aliens known as the Taurans, it promptly begins fighting with them. The narrator is drafted to be at the vanguard of the military effort to destroy the Taurans. His assignment: be the first wave to secure strategically important planets and hold them until relieved or scraped off the planet by a Tauran invasion force.
Zoe's Tale - Dunno if I posted about it yet, but I've read most of John Scalzi's Old Man's War series. Zoe's Tale is pretty much a retelling of the previous book (The Lost Colony) from the point of view of the protagonist's daughter. There were a couple of factors that kept me from liking the book as much as the other books in the series, namely the fact that most of it was a rehash, and that Scalzi kind of let his personal snark get a little out of hand. It's interesting in that it does give a reasonable story to a huge deus ex machina in The Lost Colony, but honestly this book would have probably worked better as a novella more than anything.
Man Against the Future - Brian Young is a cool guy (I know, I met him) but I could not bring myself to like this collection of his short stories. A lot of them are not-so-subtle political parables, smugly told. On top of that, almost every story has an unfinished feel to it. They're extremely short, and while a few of them actually have some reasonable development, I can't recall a single story here that I finished reading and saying "That was perfect." or even "That was pretty good". The whole book was kind of meh. At least my copy's autographed.
This makes me kind of worried about reading
Young's Operation Montauk. I think the premise will keep me interested anyway - a WWII British soldier finds himself stranded in the Cretaceous with a bunch of lost time travelers after a plan to go back in time and kill Hitler goes horribly awry.
Neuromancer - I love William Gibson's writing, I really do, but boy is the first quarter of this book dense. It took me three or four tries before I finally penetrated the book to the point where momentum took over and carried me through to the end. It's an interesting story, especially with Gibson's baroque style, but yeah. It's a little much at times.
Pump Six and Other Stories - A collection of Paolo Bacigalupi stories, charting his development as a major writer. It's interesting to see his development from a cyberpunk writer to the types of stories that he writes these days (see, The Windup Girl). His short stories can be pretty intense experiences. Most of the stories are about people set against the backdrop of slowly collapsing or post-collapse civilization. But they're not simply character sketches - a lot of them really do seem like they're possible futures not that far around the corner.
Roadside Picnic - I'll bookend this post with another vidya related book, Roadside Picnic. Written by Arkady and Boris Strugatsky in the 1970s, this is generally considered to be one of the best examples of science fiction writing of the late Soviet era. Also fairly well known by gamers as the basis for the game S.T.A.L.K.E.R.
An alien visit occurs, but as quickly as the visitors arrive, they leave again. There's no evidence that they even noticed humanity, but they did leave around lots of shiny loot (swag) that interests people. Some of it is beneficial, some of it is deadly. All of it is contained within a highly dangerous bizarro wonderland (The Zone) created by the extraterrestrial visit. While there is a professional institute dedicated to venturing into the Zone to collect and study these artifacts, there is more money to be made as stalker - illegally entering the exclusion zones to collect artifacts for resale on the black market. Red is a former stalker now working at the Insititute, but his life circumstances are dragging him back into his former trade.
Roadside Picnic[/i is a fairly pessimistic look at humanity, combining the Lovecraftian insignificance of mankind and the overly bureaucratic and inefficient governance of the USSR by the late 70s. [i]As with Dancing With Eternity, I can't recommend this one enough.
And I am currently reading:
Say what you want, at least it has charm.