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Vanessa Williams
@fridgebuzz.eth
Another SF-themed thread. It may be some people are looking for escapist distractions today. I was asked once which were the best SF writers from a literary point of view. Conceding that “literary” is poorly defined, here—regardless—is my personal annotated list:
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Vanessa Williams
@fridgebuzz.eth
Alfred Bester - "The Demolished Man" was post-modern decades before post-modernism. Additionally, it really stands the test of time.
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Vanessa Williams
@fridgebuzz.eth
William Gibson - I don't personally find Gibson to be a great storyteller, but his prose is beautiful. I still sometimes open "Count Zero" to a random page and read a few lines to savor them.
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Vanessa Williams
@fridgebuzz.eth
Vernor Vinge - because he has put forward some very high ideas, for example "the Vingean Singularity" which often guides SF writers, and the ideas in his novella "True Names".
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Vanessa Williams
@fridgebuzz.eth
China Miéville - his Hugo-award winning "The City & The City" might just be the most brilliant novel I've read in a decade. In any genre.
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Vanessa Williams
@fridgebuzz.eth
Jonathan Lethem - not strictly a genre writer, either, but things like "The Fortress of Solitude" and "Amnesia Moon" would qualify.
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Vanessa Williams
@fridgebuzz.eth
Neal Stephenson - I actually think of Stephenson as more of a journalist or pedagogue than a strictly literary writer, but I think he belongs on this list for being about more than just a ripping good yarn (which he also obviously does very well.)
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Vanessa Williams
@fridgebuzz.eth
Iain M. Banks - his earlier work in particular was expertly constructed. I'm thinking of "The Player of Games", "Use of Weapons" (my favorite), and "Ferersum Endjinn".
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Vanessa Williams
@fridgebuzz.eth
Ursula K. LeGuin - for "The Lathe of Heaven" and "The Left Hand of Darkness". Her writing tends to focus on speculative psychology/sociology rather than speculative physics.
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