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https://opensea.io/collection/books-39
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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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Vanessa Williams
@fridgebuzz.eth
Philip K. Dick - mostly because his style was so sharp and distinctive.
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Vanessa Williams
@fridgebuzz.eth
Samuel R. Delany - I admit that I've not yet read "Dahlgren", but "Nova" was impressive enough. Theodore Sturgeon - for "More Than Human" and "The Cosmic Rape".
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Vanessa Williams
@fridgebuzz.eth
Harlan Ellison - I don't recall by whom, but I know he has been called the best short-story writer in America.
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Vanessa Williams
@fridgebuzz.eth
Michael Chabon - I actually didn't care much for "The Yiddish Policeman's Union" (which won the Hugo), but if you can count "The Amazing Adventures of Kavalier and Clay" as SF, then he's definitely on my list. That book is probably my second favourite after Miéville's "The City & The City".
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Vanessa Williams
@fridgebuzz.eth
There are great literary and journalistic writers who have made significant contributions to SF, such as Orwell, Huxley, Burgess, Ballard and Borges, but I wouldn't include them in my list because they were not primarily SF authors. Hope you enjoyed this thread.
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