Does anybody really like reading Asimov? I think he's an incredibly shitty writer. His characterizations are weak. I know he's in the canon, but I would never recommend him.
Some of the robot short stories and that's it.
There's more to life than watching Buffy the Vampire Slayer! No. Really, there is! Honestly! Here's a place for Buffistas to come and discuss what it is they're reading, their favorite authors and poets. "Geez. Crack a book sometime."
Does anybody really like reading Asimov? I think he's an incredibly shitty writer. His characterizations are weak. I know he's in the canon, but I would never recommend him.
Some of the robot short stories and that's it.
The short story is far and away Asimov's best form, but the Foundation trilogy was so influential (including inspiring Paul Krugman to be an economist) that it's de rigueur for an overview of the genre.
In regard to "The Cold Equations" - several years ago someone wrote a short story with the genders reversed (woman pilot, young boy) and solved the damn thing.
I actually read that before I read Cold Equations (it was about 20 years ago, btw).
Does anybody really like reading Asimov? I think he's an incredibly shitty writer. His characterizations are weak. I know he's in the canon, but I would never recommend him.
I really haven't read him in decades, which is why I'm loving the recommendations so I can both catch up on stuff that's new to me, and revisit stuff I haven't read since college. When I picked up Canticle last year, I really appreciated finding out that it holds up to rereading after the end of the Cold War.
(And rereading Watership Down five years ago after only reading it once in 1980 was one of the best things I've read in the past decade--I'd forgotten how damn good that book is!)
I haven't seen that. It would certainly be a much different story.
It's called The Cold Solution by Don Sakers (I was right, published in 1991).
but the Foundation trilogy was so influential (including inspiring Paul Krugman to be an economist) that it's de rigueur for an overview of the genre.
Yeah, but do you enjoy reading him? Is it pleasurable?
And Joanna Russ, if you feel like having your brain fucked with.
I read The Female Man in my feminist lit class in college (where I was also introduced to Tiptree and CL Moore--the entire reading list was SF/F written by women), and remember it being quite good.
When I was 11 I enjoyed the Foundation series. I have not tried the foundation as an adult, but I do think many of his short stories hold up. As I remember,the foundation novels were really collections of short stories and novellas in any case.