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The Salty Vulcan

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Paksenarrion said:
The Foundation books by Isaac Asimov.
Good suggestion.

If the OP likes his science hard though, should look at Larry Niven's Ringworld books. In fact, anything by Niven is a good read.
 

Paksenarrion

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Quantum Roberts said:
Paksenarrion said:
The Foundation books by Isaac Asimov.
Good suggestion.

If the OP likes his science hard though, should look at Larry Niven's Ringworld books. In fact, anything by Niven is a good read.
By "hard", you mean based on possible or current physical sciences in the near future, as opposed to theoretical or seemingly magical science?
 

The Salty Vulcan

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Paksenarrion said:
Quantum Roberts said:
Paksenarrion said:
The Foundation books by Isaac Asimov.
Good suggestion.

If the OP likes his science hard though, should look at Larry Niven's Ringworld books. In fact, anything by Niven is a good read.
By "hard", you mean based on possible or current physical sciences in the near future, as opposed to theoretical or seemingly magical science?
Yes, that seems to be the most apt description of the term. Nothing against the theoretical/magical/soft kind of science, but it does tend to show it's naivete once Science has marched on.
 

Paksenarrion

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Quantum Roberts said:
Paksenarrion said:
Quantum Roberts said:
Paksenarrion said:
The Foundation books by Isaac Asimov.
Good suggestion.

If the OP likes his science hard though, should look at Larry Niven's Ringworld books. In fact, anything by Niven is a good read.
By "hard", you mean based on possible or current physical sciences in the near future, as opposed to theoretical or seemingly magical science?
Yes, that seems to be the most apt description of the term. Nothing against the theoretical/magical/soft kind of science, but it does tend to show it's naivete once Science has marched on.
Like how Star Trek portrayed small, hand-held communication devices? <_<
 

The Salty Vulcan

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Jun 28, 2009
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Paksenarrion said:
Quantum Roberts said:
Paksenarrion said:
Quantum Roberts said:
Paksenarrion said:
The Foundation books by Isaac Asimov.
Good suggestion.

If the OP likes his science hard though, should look at Larry Niven's Ringworld books. In fact, anything by Niven is a good read.
By "hard", you mean based on possible or current physical sciences in the near future, as opposed to theoretical or seemingly magical science?
Yes, that seems to be the most apt description of the term. Nothing against the theoretical/magical/soft kind of science, but it does tend to show it's naivete once Science has marched on.
Like how Star Trek portrayed small, hand-held communication devices? <_<
Or how it protrayed teleportation beams, photon cannons or a black hole gun?
Not saying it doesn't has its place. Hey, Jules Verne accurately described Space Travel and Calculators. I'm just saying the hard stuff usually has more to it than the soft. Of course, it's just my opinion.
 

Paksenarrion

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Mar 13, 2009
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Quantum Roberts said:
Paksenarrion said:
Quantum Roberts said:
Paksenarrion said:
Quantum Roberts said:
Paksenarrion said:
The Foundation books by Isaac Asimov.
Good suggestion.

If the OP likes his science hard though, should look at Larry Niven's Ringworld books. In fact, anything by Niven is a good read.
By "hard", you mean based on possible or current physical sciences in the near future, as opposed to theoretical or seemingly magical science?
Yes, that seems to be the most apt description of the term. Nothing against the theoretical/magical/soft kind of science, but it does tend to show it's naivete once Science has marched on.
Like how Star Trek portrayed small, hand-held communication devices? <_<
Or how it protrayed teleportation beams, photon cannons or a black hole gun?
Not saying it doesn't has its place. Hey, Jules Verne accurately described Space Travel and Calculators. I'm just saying the hard stuff usually has more to it than the soft. Of course, it's just my opinion.
You have a point. In my opinion, [a href="http://dresdencodak.com/2009/09/22/caveman-science-fiction/"]hard science fiction[/a] tends to portray new technology as dangerous...
 

x EvilErmine x

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Apr 5, 2010
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Ok so I'm gonna just spout out some books that i liked that people haven't already said, and hope you like em too :eek:)

The 'His Dark Materials' books - The Northern Lights, The Subtle Knife, and The Amber Spyglass by Philip Pullman

Jurassic Park, and Congo by Michal Crichton

The Jason Bourn books - The Bourn Identity, The Bourn Supremacy and The Bourn Ultimatum

Dune by Frank Herbert (I've only read Dune and not any of the sequels so i dunno about them)
 

smurf_you

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Jun 1, 2010
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Good Omens by Terry Pratchett and Neil Gaiman. One of the best books I have ever read...
 

Instant K4rma

StormFella
Aug 29, 2008
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Well, Watchmen is a great novel, if you don't mind the fact that it is a graphic novel. Very intriguing and thought provoking. Alan Moore is just a phenomenal writer.
 

ZtH

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Oct 12, 2010
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I can recommend anything by Brandon Sanderson, particularly the Mistborn series. Also Neil Gaiman is a fantastic writer, so I recommend Sandman or American Gods though those two seem to be less related to your tastes.
 

Talpidae

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Anything by Simon Scarrow - excellent historical fiction writer, but especially his Eagle series.
 

alandavidson

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Jun 21, 2010
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A Matter of Profit - Hilari Bell
Social and political commentary, much on the same vein as "Dune"

The Sherrif of Yrnmeer - Michael Rubens
A slacker is forced into action in this great comedy by one of Comedy Central's best writers.

These Children Who Come At You With Knives - Jim Knipfel
Short stories satirizing the modern age. The book begins with Satan creating the Universe and making Man out of shit.

A Tunnel in the Sky - Robert A. Heinlein
Coming-of-age tale by one of science fiction's best authors. A group of teens is forced to survive on a hostile planet when a school project goes horribly wrong.

Those are the four I would reccommend right off the bat. Good luck and happy reading.
 

Naheal

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Sep 6, 2009
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I'm gonna suggest Snow Crash. Because these are the things that Naheal does.
 

Doclector

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Aug 22, 2009
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If you're tired of twilight messing up vampires, then "the strain" is the perfect antidote. It shows just how you go about re-inventing ancient legends into modern terrors; hint, you don't make it sparkle.

And did I mention it's co-written by Guilermo del toro?
 

Aurgelmir

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Nov 11, 2009
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I just finished a great book called "Mengele Zoo", but it's apparently not translated to English :(
 

TheMann

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I'd recommend the His Dark Materials trilogy by Philip Pullman. It's a pretty good fantasy read that has philosophical meaning, if you don't mind the anti-religion theme. The first installment is a bit for children, but the latter two are much more adult.