Liam Devlin
SOC-14 5K
Anyone else read sci fi-travelleresque wish to weigh in? Feel free, we've barely touched the surface here... 

_________________________________________________Originally posted by BigBadRon:
Okay... I agree with a lot of what's been said so far:-
Niven and Pournelle (together or individually), particularly "The Mote in God's Eye", "Janissaries", and Niven's "Known Space" books.
Cherryh for the "Chanur" books (the Hani are Aslan with a different name, and the Kif are a good model for the darker side of the Vargr).
_________________________________________________Originally posted by Garf:
BUJOLD Rocks!!!
She occupies Pride of place on my bookshelf. Books I have -NEVER- sent to a book reseller, Given to a friend with out first replacing etc. Roger Zelazney's Amber Series cannot claim that honor, Nothing by Macferry, Cherryh, Heinlein or Asimov can. Only my HB Piper books and my Janisarries series occupy that sort of space.
I'm sure she infiltrated her works into my subconconscious protrayal of characters and .. stuff in my games However, She's the least traveller-esque of my favourite authors.
Liam: Diplomatic Immunity is great. but Civil Campaign is still her most hilarious.
__________________________________________Originally posted by Garf:
That is part of her genius.
She can make you laugh 'til your sides split.
She can hook you so deep with a character you bleed when they are cut.
She can make believable sympathetic characters able to make war successfully an not be easily brushed off as right wing psycho's
and she can tie it all together in a story that suspends your disbelief for long after the ride is over.
but some of the lessor writer on my list are more 'travelleresque'.
I dunno. Over the years of reading each of her books as they've come out, MTU resembles her universe more than slightly. Barrayar as 3I, Cetaganda as Zhodani Consulate, certain planets as different aspects of the Vargr extents. It's not a perfect fit by any means, but it helps with coming up with motivations and stories that seem a bit more believable. Especially if I have to deal with Nobles...Originally posted by Garf:
That is part of her genius.
(snip)
but some of the lessor writer on my list are more 'travelleresque'.
Allright - obviously I'm missing something really good here. Someone please recommend a first book to get acquainted with her work and I'll pick it up post haste.Originally posted by Garf:
That is part of her genius.
She can make you laugh 'til your sides split.
She can hook you so deep with a character you bleed when they are cut.
She can make believable sympathetic characters able to make war successfully an not be easily brushed off as right wing psycho's
and she can tie it all together in a story that suspends your disbelief for long after the ride is over.
Start with the novella I linked up to above. Then find a copy of "The Warrior's Apprentice". It will be well worth your time.Originally posted by theSea:
Allright - obviously I'm missing something really good here. Someone please recommend a first book to get acquainted with her work and I'll pick it up post haste.
Thx,[/QB]
-------------------------------------Originally posted by William:
[I dunno. Over the years of reading each of her books as they've come out, MTU resembles her universe more than slightly. Barrayar as 3I, Cetaganda as Zhodani Consulate, certain planets as different aspects of the Vargr extents. It's not a perfect fit by any means, but it helps with coming up with motivations and stories that seem a bit more believable. Especially if I have to deal with Nobles...
I first saw "The Mountains of Mourning" when it was in Analog and was utterly transfixed.
If there's anyone reading this thread, doesn't know Bujold's work, and is wondering why we're all blathering on like this, that story is now available for fee download at http://www.baen.com/library/lmbujold.htm
Check it out.William
-----------------------------------------------Originally posted by Garet:
Some additions:
Rick Shelly has 3 scifi military series - all good
David Sherman and Dan Cragg - 34 fist series - good stuff
A good "family in space" book is the Rolling Stones by R. Heinlein
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