Samuel R Delany, Philip K Dick, Ursula K Le Guin, and (maybe) William Gibson.
What scifi/fantasy authors would you be willing to defend as writers of high quality literature and not just genre fiction? What authors both have something to say, and say it well?
NB: I'm primarily looking for people who are by default filed in the SciFi ghetto, not "real" authors who have occasionally been filed in SF/fantasy. Because Kurt Vonnegut is widely acknowledged to be a virtuoso writer and has written a bunch of SF, but I'm not sure that most people think of him as a science fiction writer.
NB: I'm primarily looking for people who are by default filed in the SciFi ghetto, not "real" authors who have occasionally been filed in SF/fantasy. Because Kurt Vonnegut is widely acknowledged to be a virtuoso writer and has written a bunch of SF, but I'm not sure that most people think of him as a science fiction writer.
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Orson Scott Card ... he's a tough one. I think Ender's Game will stand the test of time, but I'm not convinced that any of his other books (the Alvin Maker series, Speaker for the Dead, etc) will.
Theodore Sturgeon perhaps. I haven't read much by him, but I was very impressed with More Than Human.
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I'd be tempted to add Heinlein for The Moon is a Harsh Mistress, but many of his other works fall short of the mark :/
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Side note: Robinson wrote his Ph.D. dissertation on the novels of Philip K. Dick.
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Roger Zelazny. Especially for his books that deal with mythology and pantheons.
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Could you recommend me some Zelazny to start out on? He's one of those authors I never picked up for some reason.
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I'll back you up on Delany and Le Guin. "High quality literature" is pretty thin on the ground in all genres.
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I'd also defend Herbert on the issue. Dune was a novel, and a series, that I enjoyed tremendously both as a youth and as an adult. While it's true that the first is widely regarded as the best, each is an essay on the politics of power and religion.
I believe Arthuer C. Clark belongs on the list as well as Jules Verne.
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Moon is a Harsh Mistress and perhaps Stranger in a Strange Land make the grade (while Starship Troopers works best as an insight into the country's mood during WWII), but I'm not sure I would recommend them to someone as great works of literature independent of their genre like I would the Earthsea series or Aye and Gomorrah or Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep or Pattern Recognition.
Dune is a great book, but I've read the whole series and I don't think you are going to convince me that anything from Children of Dune onwards is really any good at all. The ones that had an interesting plot needed to shed 50+% of their words and 90% of their bombast and the ones that didn't have an interesting plot ... didn't have an interesting plot. I haven't read any of Herbert's non-Dune books so perhaps he saves himself there.
Arthur C Clarke. Perhaps. The first book of any series is often quite good, but not any of the sequels. 2001 is excellent, 2010 less so, 2061 is for laying down and avoiding. Rendezvous With Rama follows the same pattern. Childhood's End is weird, and Orphans of the Sky is by turns awesome and infuriating. He's an idea man first and a writer second, and his ideas are always first rate while his writing is more varied.
Jules Verne I'll definitely agree on, but he's already filed under "Classics" and not SciFi.
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(And then you put him and Oshii (who I think is often brilliant) together for movies, and you get the world's best recipe for interminable socio-political monologues in front of a lot of really pretty and detailed scenery.)
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Just kidding.
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Isaac Asimov - wrote on pretty much everything, fiction and non. Definitely considered a sci-fi author though.
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To that, I'd answer "Theodore Sturgeon" because his work isn't really *about* scifi/fantasy or an exploration of a setting, but sometimes uses scifi/fantastic trappings. Some of books don't have any scifi/fantasy elements at all (e.g., "Some of your blood"), but they're still found on the scifi shelf.
On the flip side, there are some books/authors that are definitely scifi that manage to make their way on to the regular fiction shelf. In that category, I strongly recommend "The Time Traveler's Wife", which is a great scifi/romance (an unusual combination, but masterfully executed).
The other is: which scifi/fantasy authors do you feel are generating high quality literature that falls within the scifi/fantasy genre?
To which I'd point to LeGuin and Tolkien. I'm sure there are others, but I'm not thinking of them right now. This question hinges a lot on whether you're looking for high quality writing versus a high quality story. Some authors tell a great yarn and capture the imagination even if they aren't masters of language.
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i'll second tolkien, atwood, possibly le guin and gaiman, and add terry prachett, who also appears to know language intimately, and have things worth saying, with distinct characters, and plots that hang together well.
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The one name I'm surprised not to see is JG Ballard. Some don't consider him sci fi, actually, for whatever reason: because he writes about the current day, actual universes, actual technologies (sometimes). But man, can that guy write a sentence. And spin a nightmare-inducing alternate-reality yarn.
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Ctrl-A Ctrl-C, why hast thou forsaken me? Back-button, oh my back-button...
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I've gotta echo
He also thinks about how to write, and how to read, and how to live. And he writes about such things. I find almost all of his messages (http://dansimmons.com/news/message/message_index.htm) on his website (http://dansimmons.com) to be well worth reading. (In particular, and relevant to some comments here re: Herbert and Heinlein, check out his thoughts on Negative Capability (http://dansimmons.com/news/message/2004_12.htm).)
So yeah, I'd defend Dan Simmons, for sure.
Great post! ;-)
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Howard Waldrop
Joe Lansdale
James Blaylock
Michael Swanwick
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