Soooooo...
I never post on my own blog or on LJ, but I kind of figured that if I was going to get a viable response from anyone, it would be from the folks who might read this on the FLists rather than the scant handful of non-sci-fi-geeking folks who might have my blog in their RSS feeds.
I have this vision of myself as a sci-fi geek of the truest,
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Comments 14
2001 is actually Arthur C. Clarke. I've never been a huge Asimov fan, honestly, except for when I was a kid and reading his juveniles.
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And thanks for the recommendation!
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Re. Card, I like the entire Ender's Game and Ender's Shadow series, plus I'd highly recommend Pastwatch. Really, I like nearly everything he's written except the stuff about Mormons.
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I would be willing to read these with you and discuss them here on your LJ if you want. Know that I am a person who either loves or hates something.. I never seem to find an middle ground.
I did take a sci fi course in college and we read destination void for herbert.. but I prefer dune. We also read frankenstein by shelly but other than that I don't remember what we read. I could figure it out though if you wanted to know.
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01. Ray Bradbury - Either of these works well, but Farenheit 451 is the better know and more frequently referenced work.
02. Isaac Asimov - I would suggest Foundation instead of I, Robot, if you're going for the classic SF route. If you're wanting SF in mainstream media, then I, Robot would be better ( ... )
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