Yeah, I read some of Asimov's short stories; that was enough. The ideas are fun and I certainly understand his importance. But that's not enough to interest me in a novel, much less a series.
The Cold Equations always makes me think of Sheckley's The Cruel Equations. (Although it's actually about the Laws of Robotics.) Anyway, Sheckley's great and very funny.
I think because we know it happened to real women(including Gilman herself)
I don't like Asimov either, but I'm not really an SF person.
(Hell, I might as well say, "All Bradbury short stories."
YES. Especially "Homecoming".
t obvious bias is obvious
Simak's
Goblin Reservation
is good. Damn, why are half of my books in the garage behind the decrepit Mustang II!
I love Clifford Simak, who seems to have fallen along the wayside. Except for some clunky early and late books, I love them all, particularly Goblin Reservation and Way Station.
I love recommendation posts, it gives me lists of things to track down--and old stuff is often available online!
I read The Moon Is a Harsh Mistress in -- high school, I think. I remember being fascinated by the mechanics of how to create a society on the moon. The story itself was good but not spectacular. Very much a "literature of ideas" story, and the idea alone was just enough to sustain one novel. A different writer (I vote for Resnick) could probably have turned the idea into a series, but not Heinlein.
So far every item on the list brings back happy memories. I do think Heinlein's ideal society has been given its fair shake in Somalia.
I'm loving the lists and nodding a lot. Feeling too stupid to add much. I'll weigh in for
Short stories: McCaffrey's "The Ship Who Sang," Mieville's Novella "the Tain." and the stories in Looking for Jake, Stephenson, Gibson, Cadigan (Synners in particular), second Vinge's True Names, Greg Egan's Disaspora series... more after I sleep some.