Wednesday, March 13, 2013

Great SF Novels



Recently, while reading ‘Existence’ by David Brin I was struck by its’ similarity to an earlier novel of his, ‘Earth’ which in turn made me think about just how affected I had been by that work. This lead me to thinking about all the SF books that had really rocked me, and I decided that it was time for a list.
My (self-imposed) rule was to limit authors to two books at most, and that seemed to work fairly well.
All these books are brilliant, but the order also reflects my opinion on how they rank against each other (finishing with the best).

Iain M Banks

Against a Dark Background
Use of Weapons

Iain Banks is best known for his Culture novels, and they are a ton of fun. Space ships with insane names, bad attitudes, and a taste for intrigue; they tolerate the human meat sacks, but only to a point. Use of Weapons uses a common Banks outsider protagonist to introduce the Culture, but also has a wonderfully dark counterpoint stemming from the main character.
Against a Dark Background is one of the best dystopian SF novels I have read. Filled with creative and dark characters, toys and thoughts, this is a book that showed me what imagination was. This is one of Banks’ rarer non-Culture SF books, and a great stand-alone read.

Dan Simmons

Hyperion
The Rise of Endmyion

When I first finished Hyperion I threw it away, I was absolutely disgusted that the characters that I was so invested in had just been left at the moment of climax. It was only 18 months later that I discovered that there was a second book, and all was forgiven. The Hyperion Cantos is dark and powerful SF, a fascinating look into what happens when religion and artificial intelligence combine. Dan Simmons is a horror writer and it does show, but this horrific vision has a powerful arc, with a touchstone that is our own humanity. The Rise of Endmyion was particularly notable because of how well it brought the series of books together, in a way that I though was going to be almost impossible.

David Brin

Earth
Startide rising

What sets David Brin apart from the other authors here, is his attempts to think about the environment and the moral implications of what humanity does with the Earth. Earth was a 40-years in the future SF novel, one of the hardest to write, but it is done is such a lovely way, introducing us to all the scientific ideas and areas of debate about the future of this Planet and humanity itself.
Startide Rising, one of the Uplift novels, is set in a more distant future, where humanity has been contacted by aliens, and we are bottom of the food chain. In this universe the primary aim is to help other races evolve intelligence, to uplift them, and humans are the only orphan race in the galaxy. I loved the first trilogy in this series and setting up humanity as the underdog certainly makes you empathise with the characters.
 
Frank Herbert

Dune

Proper space opera, with sword fighting, giant worms, and an empire based around one thing, melange. The world building in Dune is fantastic, and the feudal nature of the characters also works well, making loyalties and betrayals even more powerful. This is the classic SF novel, it won every prize in its’ day and remains pure genius.

Daniel Keys Moran

The Long Run
The Last Dancer

Unlike the other authors on this list, Daniel Keys Moran is a relative unknown. This stuns me, because the first few books in his series of the continuing time are as action packed and complexly plotted as any series I have read. The books give you a feeling of scope and vision that sadly DKM has not yet been able to fully realise, but they are just as good as stand-alone novels. The Long Run is a fantastic action tale, based around a strong central character, a thief who is becoming a god. The Last Dancer, however is something else entirely, partially written thousands of years in the past, and partially during a new American Revolution, it is just too much fun.

Neal Stephenson

Snow Crash
Anathem

From the first page of Snow Crash you know that you are reading the best damm SF you have ever laid your hands on. If Vernor Vinge makes you think about the universe, Snow Crash smashed a near-future America into your face with stunning power. A sword wielding hacker against a modern day Howard Hughes armed with Sumerian brain-control is completely over the top, but it is the setting of this novel that truly gives it its’ power. The vision of privatised America and the avatars of the future on the ‘Metaverse’ is one that has already shaped much of the Internet as we know it (Mainly because all the real geeks read, and loved, this book).
The more I read Anathem the better it gets. I still cannot believe the publishers allowed Neal to print a book that is basically a philosophy primer. It is brilliant. The world, the characters, the plot are all absolutely original. The fact that 'humans' actually turn up later in the book only adds to the power of the novel. The book begins focused on a tiny 'monastery' in the North, and ends encompassing the entire world within which it is based. Amazingly for Neal Stephenson, probably his best ending since 'The Big U'. 

Vernor Vinge

A Fire Upon the Deep
A Deepness in the Sky

A Fire Upon the Deep blew me away when I first read it. Here was a truly original set of aliens, here was a guy who was applying the changes in communication heralded by the internet to the Universe, and the story itself was brilliant. I loved having to work out what the aliens were from within their own points of view, and I loved the ‘Zones of thought’ concept. The second book in that universe, A Deepness in the Sky had its’ own unique aliens, and a completely different world view from the first book. Deepness also had a marvellous multi-tiered plot that was beautifully constructed.
This is SF at its’ very best, testing your own vision, questioning our assumptions about life, the fundamental laws of the universe and where we stand in it. The absolute cornerstone of Science Fiction. 

So that's my list, I would love to hear from anyone who feels that they know of a book that could stand up against these, as my reading list is always looking for expansion...

2 comments:

B Mac said...

nice list, and you've certainly given me some reading to catch up on ;-) i've enjoyed everything i've read by david brin.

you're the one who introduced me to neal stevenson, but amongst his, i prefer cryptonomicon and i prefer william gibson - neuromancer to snowcrash

i just had a look at my bookshelf and have these in my own top 10.

orson scott card - enders game
david wingrove - chung kuo
asimov - foundation
robert a heinlein - stranger in a strange land
daniel keyes - flowers for algernon
john brunner - stand on zanzibar
phillip k dick - do androids dream of electric sheep
l ron hubbard - battlefield earth
greg egan - diaspora

PlayerOfGames said...

The only one of those I need to read is Stand on Zanzibar, but I will now add it to my list. I see a more 'old school' theme in your books Brett, more SF than Cyberpunk. Do you realise that the Chung Kuo novels are getting a make-over? They are being partially re-written apparently, I have not had a chance to read the new releases yet.